Over the past decade, infotainment systems have experienced a growth in functionality, broader adoption, and central incorporation into vehicle architecture. Due to the ever-growing role of wireless protocols such as Bluetooth and a known lack of patches alongside the difficulty of patch installation, this poses a new attack surface and a genuine threat to the users. Meanwhile, the tools and methodologies required for testing are scattered across the Internet, absent and need a rigorous setup. In this talk, we share a comprehensive framework BlueToolkit to test and replay Bluetooth Classic vulnerabilities. Additionally, we release new exploits and a privilege escalation attack vector. We show how we used the toolkit to find 64 new vulnerabilities in 22 modern cars and the Garmin Flight Stream flight management system used in several aircraft types. Our work equips hackers with insights and necessary information on novel vulnerabilities.