Good Luck finding a wiring diagram for any Keystone product. There are numerous requests for these and I've never seen anyone "fess up" to having found one. Realistically, like a stick built home, there's a "general scheme" to the wiring, but the actual particulars are as individual as the electrician who did the job.
On many RV's the term "pre-wired for stereo" means the speaker wires have been run through the ceiling, but no other wires are run. The 12VDC supply and ground wires are simply not supplied. But they are simple to run and if you've found a "green/white" wire in the area, you might be able to use it to supply your power. That is, if it has 12 VDC all the time. It might be the water pump supply line, or a clearance light line, etc. If so it won't have power on it all the time. Check it and go from there.
Before you start looking for a 12 VDC lead, UNPLUG the shore power line (110 VAC) !!!!! If you happen to pick up a hot AC line accidentally, you may be in for a shocking suprise !!!!! Better safe than sorry, unplug the power line.
As for identifying your wires, My guess is that the "green/white loop" you see is most likely a capped "dead end" wire, and is dedicated to power in that area, possibly just for the stereo. You can find out if it is hot by using a VOM with a sharp terminal on the lead. If you don't have a lead like that, stick a pin in the wire and use regular VOM leads. You'll need a good ground for the other lead, so maybe a wire to chassis ground connected to the neg lead. If the wire does have 12VDC on it, you can cut the wire, connect both ends (or use a Scotchlock splice) which is one of the familiar blue ones that clips over the existing wire and the new wire is inserted in a hole, the metal connector squeezed shut and the insulator folded over. They are available at any autoparts store or electronics supplier.
I urge you, before you start reaching your hand into dark places in an RV and/or measuring voltages, unplug your trailer's 110Volt supply. No need to run the risk of contacting high voltage AC circuits !!!!!
If you can't find an active 12 VDC source, it's pretty simple to run one from the battery to the area you plan to install a radio. Just be sure to put an inline fuse in the wire to protect from overloading the line and possibly causing a fire.
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John
2015 F250 6.7l 4x4
2014 Cougar X Lite 27RKS
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