That is beautiful country sir! And a fine looking ride too!!Great pics.
Under the rear driver's seatYes sir- When my wife and I go hiking i strip out all the navigation and after market comms gear as you never know who is going to show up at the trail head. Send a pic when you have it worked out.
Looks good. Wires are behind the glove box area. There is a thread all about them.Under the rear driver's seat
I have two straps which will stay in place.
Which attach to the underside/desk stand primarily to prevent sliding backwards.
The rear strap stays with the radio and goes through the seat brackets to prevent forward motion and side slip.
Install/removal will probably be 2--3min with the electrical connectors... if I ever find a way to manage that.
(For starters where are the aux wires in the passenger area? Everything I found was wired to a connector.)
When we head down to Dearh Valley in March or April from Oregon I will need to look you upChecked out ome of snow fall In the mountains from this past week. Wheeler Pass, Pahrump, NV.
I made some measurements and am eyeing the two bolts holding on the side/removable portion of the bumper. That section has better flatness, and there's also empty space between the rear edge and the grill/lights, leaving plenty of room to come up from underneath with coax and the antenna mount. On the main/inside bumper, the bracket would need to be lifted 0.5" to clear that plastic piece in front of the grill.Here’s the promised photos.
(For starters where are the aux wires in the passenger area? Everything I found was wired to a connector.)
pps Yeah I just haven't put in the requisite 3.7hrs to fish them out. 20min wasn't enough.
Second time is a charm! Having the footwell courtesy light on helped because it made me seriously question the switchbacked and drastically electrical taped section of cord. I found the sealed ends with a bit of digging.Looks good. Wires are behind the glove box area. There is a thread all about them.