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teotwaki

Excelsior!
I also am looking at options for backup lights. They'd be very helpful in the boondocks.
trailer0101.jpg


Not sure yet but I am leaning towards oval LED versions. They might require some hole saw and file time to open up two new holes in the rear bumper or some sort of brackets. Because I am thinking about a spare tire carrier I need to avoid some mounting locations.
 

Titanpat57

Expedition Leader
These are my favorite..LED Pods

but I buy most of my LED's from Paul over at R and P Carriage Sales...he's a great guy to do business with, and very helpful.

I have tons of LED's slated for installation the week of the 11th on. (I have a bit of a fetish... : )
 

teotwaki

Excelsior!
These are my favorite..LED Pods

but I buy most of my LED's from Paul over at R and P Carriage Sales...he's a great guy to do business with, and very helpful.

I have tons of LED's slated for installation the week of the 11th on. (I have a bit of a fetish... : )

R&P is where I bought my Tekonsha brake controller. :sombrero:

I'd be curious about how the Oznium 120 degree single LED might compare to the LED oval flood such as Adventure Trailers sells with 18 LEDs
reverseled.jpg
 

Titanpat57

Expedition Leader
My first trailer attempt I built a tailight assembly out of Azek..a PVC composite material that can be screwed, glued like wood. I inserted the LED pods into a pre drilled hole and siliconed them in. I used a seperate switch located in a panel inside to turn them on. I like the panel you made..very clean and organized. My last panel I included switches to provide "area lighting" front, back, left, right.

Martyn has top notch stuff...you won't be dissappointed with whatever you buy from him either.

I think I linked the wrong pod the first time...this is the model I'm using. I actually converted all my rechargable flashlights over by replacing the regular bulbs (with a little help from the Rotozip) to these LED pods.

Here is the "spot" pod http://www.oznium.com/high-intensity-led-spotlight.
 

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Photog

Explorer
Something to consider

Using LED's as a light source for backing up, may not provide the light expected. LED's seem bright when you look directly at them (good for running lights & brake lights), but they don't seem to light up objects very well.

Before committing to LED's, for backup lights, try both LED & incandescent bulbs, measure the reflected light coming off your garage door, for each type of light. The light that produces more reflected light will be much better (safer) when looking in your mirrors and backing up.

The same holds true for camp lights.
 

teotwaki

Excelsior!
Something to consider

Using LED's as a light source for backing up, may not provide the light expected. LED's seem bright when you look directly at them (good for running lights & brake lights), but they don't seem to light up objects very well.

Before committing to LED's, for backup lights, try both LED & incandescent bulbs, measure the reflected light coming off your garage door, for each type of light. The light that produces more reflected light will be much better (safer) when looking in your mirrors and backing up.

The same holds true for camp lights.

Good thinking. I do have a small pair of cheap "fog" lights I could clamp to the back and try out.
 

teotwaki

Excelsior!
I looked up the part number on the springs at ProComp's site http://www.explorerprocomp.com/PDFs/07cat/132.pdf and found out from the spec sheet:

Procomp part number: 51323 for Jeep YJ Wrangler rear springs 2.5" lift
flat length: 45.87"
free length: 42.37"
camber: 7.4"
eyelets: 1.5"
leaf width: 2.5"
leaves: 4
weight: 28.6 lbs
spring rate: 188 lbs/in

The eyelets have red poly bushings and the kit for replacements is 69261
 
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teotwaki

Excelsior!
I ordered some 6" oval white LED lights from A/T that replaced the current red brake/turn lights in the bumper. I added some LED combination stop/turn lights with a red side marker. I also mounted up the Blitz fuel can holders

Bunch of photos of the work....

New stoplight roughly in place compared to old oval stoplight
trailer1161.jpg

Fuel can holder with half size Scepter fuel can and new LED stoplight. It was getting dark so the flash photos are not the best.
 
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teotwaki

Excelsior!
The new rear LED stop/turn lights are all wired up


I turned my attention to the overall electrical wiring, in particular what was in the nose box. There were no fuses or breakers of any sort and with two big batteries in there almost any short circuit would be cause for a meltdown. I also wanted to add a better solar panel controller with a current/voltage meter, a marine style battery charger and a relay to be able to switch on the new backup lights manually.

It took a bit to figure out how to mount the panel between the two big bolts that fasten the nose box and water tank together. I also wanted to avoid nuts on the back of the panel so I went with drilling and tapping all of the mounting holes. When I start a project I pull everything out and spread it out in the garage. It was cold enough last night that I set up a small heater too.



Here is the panel with all of the holes in it


And here is the panel with all of the components screwed down. I left space to add one more breaker to the left of the 100 Amp unit.


This setup will make it easy to add other items such as a two-way radio in the nose box.
 
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teotwaki

Excelsior!
I bored a big hole in the nose box for the fitting that holds the battery tender's AC plug. It is right below the two existing DC cig lighter sockets
trailer149.jpg


Then I plugged in the new LED backup lights to see how they looked

 
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teotwaki

Excelsior!
Then back to working on the electrical panel and all of the wiring on it.
Started to fill the wiring in and then set it into the nose box for a test fit.

Then took it back out to finish the wiring.

The wiring is solid but not as "pretty" as I'd like. But it survived washboard roads so that's good enough.....
 
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teotwaki

Excelsior!
I reworked all of the wiring in the nose box

  1. Extended the trailer harness and wired it into the panel's main "input" terminal strip
  2. Built a new harness for the 7-pin trailer plug with larger gauge wires for the power and ground inputs.
  3. Wired up the cig lighter sockets to the Blue Sea fuse box.
  4. Built new cables to parallel the two batteries and connect them to the panel.
  5. Hooked up the battery charger and tested it.
  6. Tested the solar charge controller.
Here is how the nose box looked when I picked the trailer up.
trailer004k.jpg


A few pictures taken as I worked on it all



Solar charge controller works!
 
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teotwaki

Excelsior!
I finished all of this off before I took the trailer to Death Valley for 3 days. Some people think I've been sitting around doing nothing? Duh.....

Before photo
trailer004k.jpg


After......
trailer%2B168.jpg


This is how I brought the backup light wires, breakaway switch wires and frame ground out of the nose box.


Wires under the trailer are run and inside split loom


Cig lighter sockets rewired. Just below the battery tender inlet you can see the entry point for the wires that go out through the plastic elbow on the bottom of the nose box.


Various shots of labeling. These labels helped me out when I was troubleshooting!




Backup lights relay and switch. The relay just passes through the voltage from the truck. Flip the switch and local battery power is applied
 
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teotwaki

Excelsior!
Somewhere I had read of another person who had added lights into their RTT by reworking an IKEA LED strip setup that was for lighting under cabinets.

Mark Stephens' Adventure Parents web site:

Eezi-Awn 1200 Roof Top Tent: Evaluation and Photos | Adventure Parents

I found the "DIODER" at IKEA, cleanly eliminated the AC transformer and replaced the AC plug with a cig lighter plug.

Here is the finished light cord for power


The little junction box was for the original four cords to go to four light strips but I only plug in one cord now. The black plug is fused. The on/off switch is the original.

I just snake the cord through the tent's hinge cover and plug one end into the nose box outlet.


This is all of the junk that you don't need.


The tiny 12v power supply might be useful for some other low power project. The other cords I'll keep as spares in case the one in the tent gets whacked.

A few low quality night shots out in Death Valley. ;)

Lights on inside the tent with a fuzzy moon up above in Death Valley last Saturday.

Enough light for s shaky non-flash photo!


There are 9 white LEDs per strip. I zip tied them to the top pole.

 

Borrego60

Rendezvous Conspiracy
Nice wiring job,clean,marked and well thought out. I did the same thing with led strips for the inside of the tent but ran all my wires inside the metal tent frame and installed a small radio shack project box and two switches for the red and white leds. Will do pictures after this rain lets up.
 
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