Remote Roof Module Review - gapTech

Ok cool, i better start reading up on all of this before i get in trouble for asking too many silly questions BUT can you tell me how i get one of these please... i'm in the process of reading the group thread (8 pages left...)
 
oo7ml said:
Ok cool, i better start reading up on all of this before i get in trouble for asking too many silly questions BUT can you tell me how i get one of these please... i'm in the process of reading the group thread (8 pages left...)
it's all in that thread :D
 
Here's a couple of videos;
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IjePXkjYXhA
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5hSwmdGD7nc
 
gapTech said:
Here's a couple of videos;
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IjePXkjYXhA
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5hSwmdGD7nc

Nice vids :thumbsup: .
I should do the job soon. The snow is hopefully gone in 2 weeks :) ...
Picture is taken last weekend (my wife is driving):

IMG_1271.jpg


Cheers

Dice
 
Fitted gaptech yesterday (so the rain is my fault), shame I missed out on the group buy but what a great product! I love pushing the button a few seconds before coming to a halt so the hood starts as soon as I come to a stop without me having to do anything.

I did find the scotch locks gave less than perfect connections so ditched them in favour of terminal blocks but I'm sure many folk get on fine with the scotch locks.

Fast delivery as well. Top service, thanks!
 
Nova2k7 said:
where can i get some of the chock blocks that come with these?

holy-thread-revival-batman.jpg

LOL, Maplin, B&Q, Homebase, Screwfix... any electrical / home / DIY place should sell them
 
Nova2k7 said:
where can i get some of the chock blocks that come with these?
You can get them in places like Halfords or Maplin - different colours/sizes for different gauges of wire

http://www.halfords.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/product_storeId_10001_catalogId_10151_productId_156146_langId_-1_categoryId_255229

Personally, I don't like them as they partially sever the wire and create a weak spot that can break, I'd rather cut the wire and use crimped insulated bullet connectors instead
 
PerryGunn said:
Nova2k7 said:
where can i get some of the chock blocks that come with these?
You can get them in places like Halfords or Maplin - different colours/sizes for different gauges of wire

http://www.halfords.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/product_storeId_10001_catalogId_10151_productId_156146_langId_-1_categoryId_255229

Personally, I don't like them as they partially sever the wire and create a weak spot that can break, I'd rather cut the wire and use crimped insulated bullet connectors instead

thanks for this! they are for a small wire in the headlight for the indicators!
 
pvr said:
I used a gas solder to do mine.
Not everyone is confident with a soldering iron, especially in cramped areas like a car where a careless move can burn the leather on the console or seat, people are unlikely to have such issues with a crimping tool - crimping is also about 10x faster than soldering :)

Crimping is the preferred way to make a strong physical connection between wires as it gives a more consistent connection and also reduces strain - wires often bend at the point where they enter the solder joint and, especially with thin wires, a few bends will lead to mechanical fatigue and snapping whereas the end of crimped connector grips the insulation of the wire rather than the wire itself.

In the past I have crimped and and then flowed a small amount of silver solder into the wire end of the crimp, but I've only ever bothered to do this on audio cables where I've wanted to prevent any oxidation of the wires and, if I'm honest, I'm not sure it was worth the effort of adding the solder
 
But if you heat shrink the solder join, it looks so much nicer and no chance of rattling connectors :)

I used to crimp all the time, but ran out of crimp "bits" so moved to soldering instead as I kept forgetting to re-order :D
 
pvr said:
But if you heat shrink the solder join, it looks so much nicer and no chance of rattling connectors :)

I used to crimp all the time, but ran out of crimp "bits" so moved to soldering instead as I kept forgetting to re-order :D
The insulated crimp connectors won't rattle as they have plastic sheathing added at time of manufacture :thumbsup:

Male and female
Vinyl-Insulated%20Bullet.jpg
 
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