Pics... I tried!
Trying again here!
So, that one above shows the terminal strips which had been screwed (two high) to the sidewalls of the console's wood box.
And, here, is the back of a switch panel - this looks worse than it really is. I needed to relocate 8 or 9 switches, but didn't need the siren or air dump or strobes or light bar... so, for those, I marked the wires and capped them.
The switches are smaller, vertically, than are the Freightliner panel switches. But, I had a bunch of blanks in the panel and am relocating the ambo switches to those cutouts. Here, they are just dropped into place for planning. As much as this may pain some, I'm going to RTV them from the back (with a bead along each side) to hold them in place within the larger Freightliner cutouts. The fit well side to side, so this is just to keep them aligned and from falling out of the openings.
I'll not get into the solder/crimp war.
I admit that I soldered the connectors on that jumper cable, but I read compelling arguments for crimping alone. So, these I just crimped. The $26 crimper I bought worked great on the ring terminals I crimped onto the #1 cable. And it worked well, but took more force, on the thicker-walled Warn/Anderson/Napa connectors.
That's all for now. Except for the new winch cable I ordered. Remember this was a used winch and this weekend, when I unspooled and rewrapped the whole thing, I found a couple of kinks. So, new cable is on the way. And if you think the crimp/solder argument is heated, just look at the cable/synthetic discussions. For many reasons, it's staying cable for us.