I still don't understand what any of the above means, but I don't think it matters. My comments were made about the Hyundai Genesis and I don't know anything about the above audio systems.
The point is that you're assuming the "audio system" is ONE PIECE.
I'm telling you that MANY, if not MOST automakers view it as two pieces. You have the head unit (and any separate screens/keypads) in the dash, supplied by one supplier, and the speaker system (the amp, subwoofer(s), speakers, etc), supplied by a second supplier.
You want a good example where you can't deny the obvious? Look at the Audi A8. Base system is Bose. Uplevel system ($6000 Canadian... so probably $500 in the US

) is Bang & Olufsen. Everything other than the speakers/subs/amps is, AFAIK, the same, and is Audi's fancy MMI system. Audi just got Bose and B&O to both design systems that can plug into the MMI system.
Here is what I think. Hyundai tells Harman INternational that they want 3 audio systems for the same car, base, premium, and tech package. It is decided that the base system is regular stereo, the premium is 5.1 surround sound, and the tech package is 7.1 with DVD and works through the DIS system that also provides GPS. Harman has a large number of brands from inexpensive to very expensive components so that they can design and build all three for the Hyundai Genesis. The top two systems will be labeled as Lexicon since they incorporate surround sound processing, which is Lexicon's specialty. It just makes no sense that for a very low volume car like the Genesis base model, that Hyundai would bother trying to deal with multiple vendors if Harman can do all three.
Hmm... Hyundai always seem to deal with Harman for their premium audio, though. They have Infinity systems on Sonatas and the Genesis coupes. Azeras have Infinity too, no? Does that mean the base systems are Harman?
But that doesn't address the whole head unit issue. Again, why are you refusing to engage my central objection to your logic, which is this:
automakers usually purchase head units from a different supplier than the speaker/sub/amp combination. I think this is particular true for the "uplevel" audio options, which usually come with a head unit from the same supplier as the base sound system's head unit, and a brand name audio system from somebody else.
Yet your ENTIRE reasoning rests on the assumption that a similar head unit means that both sets of speakers attached to the similar head units must come from the same supplier.
Second, it not just that the faceplates look the same, it is that controls on the base system and the 5.1 are identical in most respects (the 17 speaker system uses the DIS controls).
Again, you are talking about HEAD UNITS.
It makes tons of sense for the two non-DIS head units, at least, to have been built by the same supplier and hence share the same controls, internal logic, etc. As for the navigation one in the 2010 or the DIS one, who knows?
But why do you refuse to see that Hyundai could have gone to their 'usual' head unit supplier or to somebody else, asked them to design three head units for the Genesis, and then gone to Harman, asked them to design two or three audio systems, including a high-end 7.1. Surely the head unit company's engineers can then sit down with the Harman folks and work out how their head unit will integrate with Harman's fancy processing. (For the base configuration, it's probably a standard analog signal, not the fancy fiber stuff in the DIS car)
This, I might add, is how other companies do it! Go look at a GM with a Delphi head unit and optional Monsoon or Bose. Head unit looks and feels the same whether you get the Monsoon/Bose setup or not, yet I'm pretty damn sure that the base setup on those cars is just some generic cheap speakers right out of the Delphi parts bin.
But I guess that common sense is not enough
It's not "common sense" when the starting premise of your argument is something that does not reflect industry practice.
so I found the specs at the HMA Service website. From looking at the specs, certain things are true:
1. All of the "audio unit" electrical properties of the base (RADIO/CDP/MP3) and premium system (RADIO/6CDC/MP3) are the same, including the rated output of Max 3.2Vrms and load impedance of 10KΩX 4. I can't tell from the spec whether the RADIO/6CDC/MP3 includes both the 14 and 17 speaker systems.
The 17 speaker system is in a separate "DIS" category of the service manual. Radio/6CDC/MP3 is the 14 speaker system.
2. On 4 of the 7 speakers on the base Genesis (the speakers on all 4 doors) they have identical specs as both the premium (14 speaker) and DIS (17 speaker) systems. Rated input 25W, 50W max, Impedance of 2 ± 0.3 ohms. I find that an amazing coincidence.
I noticed that too, but I'm not an electrical or audio engineer, so honestly, I can't say whether it is a coincidence or not.
It makes lots of sense for the speakers in the doors to be the same Harman-supplied ones on all three variants. But not because the head units behave the same!
So I tried doing a little serious research. I went to
http://www.newhyundaiparts.com/ and tried to figure out which cars used which parts.
http://hyundai.lexicon.com/system.aspx is helpful too.
My conclusion (but that's obvious) is that the 14 and 17 speakers are the same, except a different front center speaker (which I assume also includes the additional front center tweeter on the hyundai.lexicon.com web site), two extra door speakers (these part descriptions say rear, hyundai.lexicon.com says front).
For the 7 speaker system, I think the tweeters are the same, while the door speakers may or may not be the same.
You have the 7 speaker system, no? Can you confirm if your car has any speakers under the parcel shelf? It LOOKS to me as though you should have four door speakers (one per door), two tweeters on the front doors, and a subwoofer.
Honestly, though, I am getting horribly mixed up in terminology, so I could be wrong.
See, the parts catalog has:
- front door speaker (one for the 14 and 17, one for the 7)
- rear door speaker (one for the 17, one for the 14 and 17, one for the 7) (this has to be wrong because the 17 has an extra front speaker)
- woofer (one for the 17, one for the 14, one for the 7) (I think they mean "subwoofer", since the description underneath says SPEAKER ASSY-SUB WOO)
- front door left, front door right, rear door left, rear door right tweeters (doesn't say what system they're for)
- package tray speaker (doesn't say what system it's for)
- instrument panel speaker (one for the 14, one for the 17)
The HMA service info has:
- front door door speaker (all)
- front door tweeter speaker (all, different specs on the 14/17)
- front door middle speaker (17)
- rear door speaker (all)
- rear tweeter speaker (14/17)
- center speaker (14/17)
- subwoofer speaker (all, specs are different on the 14/17)
- surround speaker (14/17)
- center tweeter speaker (17)
So, my problem is, I don't know what each thing matches up to. Certainly it seems WEIRD to me that the front tweeters have different specs on the 14/17, but the PART would be the same?!? and conversely, the door speakers have the same specs, but are different parts - could it be because the cover (which I think is included with the speaker part) doesn't say "lexicon", but the speaker is the same?
Can somebody who understands car audio terminology better try and repeat this research?
I'm inclined to conclude, honestly, at this point that you're more or less right about the speakers. Different subwoofer. Quite possibly, all of the other 6 speakers are the same. Certainly the tweeters would be. The matching specs on the door speakers suggest they are, too.
So good for Hyundai. Better than using some cheaper speakers for the base car. And given how few 7 speaker cars (base models US cars, non-tech 2009 Canadian cars) must be sold compared to the other two systems, it makes sense for them to just reuse a subset of the same parts instead...
(BTW, the navigation head unit is listed as $4600. And $3200 for the 17 speaker amp... but only $385 for the 14 speaker amp. Wow.)