Skinny
Well-known member
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- Portsmouth, NH
I was tired of holding my coffee cup on long excursions. Chugging it so I didn't have to hold onto it was very counterproductive and resulted in shakes worse than a 6.2 diesel. So ten bucks later from Autozone...a solution to all of my beverage holding needs. Spillmaster console twin by hopkins, found in the aisle with all the sh*t.
All it needed were two holes to be drilled in the bottom, a pair of M4x0.7mm bolts which threaded into the bracket which normally holds the NP208 shifter cover. If you have an NP208 tcase, this mod will require swapping to the NP205.
The M1031 naturally has a large blind spot so rather than back out of a parking spot at the grocery store and run over some child due to his/her mother spending more time texting than holding onto her child's hand, I installed a backup cam. Plus I am going up Mt. Washington next month and would rather see what is behind me than learn there is a 4,000' drop the hard way.
I bought the equipment off amazon. Build quality is on par for cheapo import stuff but for the price, I could buy a crate of them.
Amazon.com: Night Vision Parking Car Rear View Wide Angle LED Reversing CMOS Camera: Car Electronics
$17 for the camera. I did add some RTV to the wire coming out of it just as precaution. Mounting bracket has a lot to be desired but can't complain for the price. If it fails, maybe I will step up to a better unit.
Amazon.com: 7 inch TFT Color LCD Car Rear View Camera Monitor Support Rotating The Screen and 2 AV Inputs: Electronics
$36 for the monitor. It has two AV inputs in case I want to add a front bumper or rock camera. Who knows...
It does have 4:3 and 16:9 ratios and can flop the image to accomodate mulitple mounting styles.
I added the rear camera right underneath the tailgate. I would have liked to see it up higher but no easy place to mount it and the wire wouldn't have been long enough. It does spot the pintle hook nicely
Rear camera was bolted up using some M4 bolts with a nut between the bracket and the body to space it out. I ran the wire down the driver side frame rail with the stock harness. Brought it up through the grommet for the speedo and PTO cables. The monitor I stuck to the ceiling using the supplied double sided tape. I ran the wire to the sun visor bracket and secured it down the A pillar using wire clamps. I tucked them into the weatherstrip so this is a no drill install.
Cheers!
All it needed were two holes to be drilled in the bottom, a pair of M4x0.7mm bolts which threaded into the bracket which normally holds the NP208 shifter cover. If you have an NP208 tcase, this mod will require swapping to the NP205.
The M1031 naturally has a large blind spot so rather than back out of a parking spot at the grocery store and run over some child due to his/her mother spending more time texting than holding onto her child's hand, I installed a backup cam. Plus I am going up Mt. Washington next month and would rather see what is behind me than learn there is a 4,000' drop the hard way.
I bought the equipment off amazon. Build quality is on par for cheapo import stuff but for the price, I could buy a crate of them.
Amazon.com: Night Vision Parking Car Rear View Wide Angle LED Reversing CMOS Camera: Car Electronics
$17 for the camera. I did add some RTV to the wire coming out of it just as precaution. Mounting bracket has a lot to be desired but can't complain for the price. If it fails, maybe I will step up to a better unit.
Amazon.com: 7 inch TFT Color LCD Car Rear View Camera Monitor Support Rotating The Screen and 2 AV Inputs: Electronics
$36 for the monitor. It has two AV inputs in case I want to add a front bumper or rock camera. Who knows...
It does have 4:3 and 16:9 ratios and can flop the image to accomodate mulitple mounting styles.
I added the rear camera right underneath the tailgate. I would have liked to see it up higher but no easy place to mount it and the wire wouldn't have been long enough. It does spot the pintle hook nicely
Rear camera was bolted up using some M4 bolts with a nut between the bracket and the body to space it out. I ran the wire down the driver side frame rail with the stock harness. Brought it up through the grommet for the speedo and PTO cables. The monitor I stuck to the ceiling using the supplied double sided tape. I ran the wire to the sun visor bracket and secured it down the A pillar using wire clamps. I tucked them into the weatherstrip so this is a no drill install.
Cheers!
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