This is absolutely amazing man! I'm jealous of everything lol.
I currently have a 98 XJ Limited and I want to go this route, and my first question is with someone who doesn't have much experience with electronics aside from a head unit install and just using the ******* out of my apple products, could they install/build something almost identical? I'm going to be in the market for a tablet that I want to install into my XJ.
I want it to do everything yours can minus the OBDII since I have a autoscan gauge 2 already. I know you mentioned a list of parts and schematics, so just curious what all it would take. I won't be able to start the project till the beginning of next year.
Keep up the amazing work man.
thanks!
you can absolutely keep it simple and still have 95% of what i've done. there's a lot of complexity in my approach simply because i was particular about certain things, and sometimes there were things i thought would be simpler a certain way but would be more complex for the average non-electrical-tinkering person.
you might consider a fairly pre-built solution like this:
https://store.mp3car.com/ProductDetails.asp?ProductCode=MimicsDash
but if you want to do something custom with a tablet, the basic formula is:
- a tablet. Android is more customizable than iOS but iOS just plain works if you are keeping it really simple. if you want fancy widgets and custom home screen layouts, Android hands down. get one with cell service if you can afford it, it's just so convenient. otherwise you can still share wifi from your phone when you want internet. and of course there are plenty of times you can't get internet at all and so you'll have bought apps with pre-downloaded maps and such... but trust me, having things like weather and pandora always just work in town is nice.
- power supply for the tablet. every tablet out there has a cigarette-lighter style power supply available. plug it into the outlet that is switched on/off with the car, if you don't have one you can get one for a few bucks and wire it up easily. you can choose how much you want to try and hide wires by removing body panels carefully tucking things away.
- mounting, dock and wiring. if panavise makes a bracket for your rig, then mount a RAM cradle or OEM dock/cradle to that and you're set without drilling any holes. if you get a tablet that has a car dock available, it probably has power in and audio out already. that will keep the wiring super clean and make the tablet easy to remove by not having to unplug 2 cords every time. otherwise some tablets have optional cables which combine audio + charging. something like this dock is great if available:
http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-ECS-K1E3BEGSTA-Vehicle-Navigation-Galaxy/dp/B007JJVYEQ/
- GPS. most tablets with cell service have integrated GPS chips, and those actually seems to work fine. otherwise there are bluetooth GPS devices available. there's a couple top models, different for iOS and Android, but just google and search forums a bit. keep in mind if you get a bluetooth GPS, then you probably need to run another power cord (with some exceptions like the bad-elf for ipad).
- sound output. there's no reason you have to integrate the tablet with your audio system, but many people want to since it's there and can provide a great way to play mp3 and/or streaming audio. simplest thing is plugging a cord into the headphone jack that can then plug into the auxillary input on your stereo. if you have a factory stereo with no input, you can usually get a generic "mp3 player input" module that plugs in to where the cd-changer would connect. again having a dock or special cable with audio output makes less clutter. you can also go with bluetooth audio receiver, some of these even have buttons that control the media players on the tablets. this is another device that needs a power cable too. also not all bluetooth receivers are created equal, some sound like absolute crap in fact. regardless of how you get the sound out, plugging into an existing head unit is going to be the simplest thing. next simplest is plugging into an aftermarket amp, but you just need to wire the turn-on lead to the amp to the same switched power that the tablet is. i wouldn't recommend trying to integrate with a factory amp to keep it simple, you may run into issues trying to convert from line-level to speaker-level inputs and such like i did.
- automating and customizing. there's an app called Tasker for Android that is able to do nearly anything by putting together scripts in a visual way. it can get complex, and there are simpler apps like Llama that do a lot of what Tasker can, but aren't as fully automatic or powerful. at a minimum you want profile management app that can realize when the tablet is not connected to power and then put it in airplane mode to save battery, and realize when it is charging to take it out of airplane mode. you can get fancy though with Tasker - beyond doing lots of things when the Jeep cranks or shuts down, my tablet checks on things like if it's near my house and then turns on WiFi and an FTP server to let me remotely push up new mp3s and gps tracks from my home computer. for customizing, there's a million widgets and apps that can do nearly anything, so its all about how much time you spend tinkering with them. if you are fairly computer literate, then consider a custom ROM like CyanogenMod that completely unlocks Android devices.
the integration with the factory steering wheel remote buttons was the only thing i did that needed to be as difficult as it was.
join mp3car.com's forum and start looking at other people's worklogs to get ideas, and you can always ask for help with wiring or such over there too. good luck!