Roof mounted lights

pete.wilson

Adventurer
Hey Guys

I'm looking for suggestions on the best way to run wiring for 4 lights from the roof of my Suburban to the interior compartment. I have thought of drilling a hole in the rails of my existing roof luggage rack and then use silicon to seal; but thought someone else may have a better idea. Maybe some kind of Aicraft bulkhead connector or something? I want it clean, waterproof, and attractive. Any suggestions?
Thanks for the help.

Pete Wilson
 

overlander

Expedition Leader
I have also been researching this exact issue. I've been looking at marine through-the-hull connections as seeming to be the most feasible. Love to hear what others have come up with that involve through the roof. I'm not interested in running lengthy pieces of wire up the pillars and such. Through the roof (and under the roof rack) in my opinion is the best way of protecting wires from UV exposure and multiple swats of branches/foliage over time.

these military connectors also look at the best solution, but you really have to do your homework to get these right.
http://www.connecticc.com/default.aspx?Page=Military_Connectors
 

adventureduo

Dave Druck [KI6LBB]
I ran just a single hot line up through my pilar and then used a distribution box at the rack. For a ground i used a grounding strap and then grounded the lights to the light tabs. This way i didnt have 8 wires to feed through my roof/pilar/snorkel etc.
 

ntsqd

Heretic Car Camper
On my old Sub I used a marine water proof socket & plug for the hot wire. It worked, but the contacts tended to corrode as only the socket was water tight. This time around I think I might go with a marine thru-deck fitting and a Weatherpak or a Deutcsh for disconnect.
 

outsidr

Adventurer
SOCALFJ said:
I ran just a single hot line up through my pillar and then used a distribution box at the rack. For a ground i used a grounding strap and then grounded the lights to the light tabs. This way i didn't have 8 wires to feed through my roof/pillar/snorkel etc.

Agreed, I ran a + and - through a small < 3/8" hole in my roof. Used the above daisy chain method for power and sealed the cut with a conduit material and a bung with silicone for topping. It is scary but straightforward . 1yr down no leaks. :D
 

offroad_nomad

Adventurer
I ran my wires down the door weatherstipping into the engine compartment.
Wiring2.jpg

Wiring.jpg
 

pete.wilson

Adventurer
With using various types of connectors is having the correct crimp tool for the pins which a lot of times is a major expense. I still have Raychem crimpers for enviromental splices which are sealed when done. If I did the daisy chain method, no problem. It's just the thought of drill through that nice steal roof and having potential leaks and/or rust developing later. To run four lights of 55 to 100 watts, what gauge wire did you use? I would think something in the 8-10 gauge range may be sufficient for periodic use, or heavier for constant useage. A small distribution box at the roof rack with fuses would do-able easy enough. Radio shack has some smaller boxes that could be sealed and painted easy enough. If anyone has a pics that may help also. Thanks for the input guys.

Pete
 

Lynn

Expedition Leader
Why you need a snorkel:

1. dust

2. deep water

3. cable trough



Seriously, if you happen to have a snorkel, how 'bout running your wires from the cab through an existing hole in the firewall, then use your snorkel to route the wires up to your roof rack? The ABS or whatever the snorkel is made of should be easy enough to seal (use cheap and easy bulkhead fittings, if you like), and you certainly wouldn't have to worry about rust around the holes.

Just a thought.
 

Frode S

New member
Darn and Blast!

The snorkel idea is great! And so simple! Makes me feel like a fool not to have thoght of that myself...
 

BMAN

Adventurer
I am also interested in any other "bulkhead" type ideas you all have. I unfortunately will need to run 7 or 8 circuits to the roof on the 60 by the time my build is 100%, and a weathertight through the roof fix would be the best for me.
 

ntsqd

Heretic Car Camper
BMAN said:
I am also interested in any other "bulkhead" type ideas you all have. I unfortunately will need to run 7 or 8 circuits to the roof on the 60 by the time my build is 100%, and a weathertight through the roof fix would be the best for me.
My suggestion would be to put a jacketed multi-conductor trailer cable thru a water-tight deck fitting like this West Marine product or these McMaster offerings. You'll want to seal where the wires break out of the jacket.
 

mrstang01

Adventurer
Pete,

What did you wind up using? I'm getting ready to do this. Unfortunately, many of the links on this thread are dead.

Michael
 

eugene

Explorer
yea I noticed the other links above didn't work either.

You can go to page 105 of their catalog http://www.nxtbook.com/nxtbooks/waytek/catalog/

and get better pictures there. You get them in different sizes to match the wiring you need to feed though. They are also standard NPT thread so you can go to the hardware store and atach electrical conduit to them if needed.
 

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