AndySpill
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Andy
- Joined
- Oct 24, 2023
- Threads
- 71
- Messages
- 1,654
- Reaction score
- 1,270
- Location
- Pittsburgh
- Vehicle(s)
- 2018 JL Sahara
- Thread starter
- #1
Before I spend the time on this DIY project, whose results would I would share and not be for profit, I'd let to get a sense on whether—and I suspect not—it worth it.
Question: for those of you with a JL Tazer, better with a SGW extension cable as well, do you still find disconnecting the JL Tazer and connecting the cables into the SGW via this extension cord before dealer visits, although world's easier with this extension cord, cumbersome?
Maybe not. Maybe you only do it once or twice a year on dealer visits such that even if awkward, it's infrequency leaves you with better problems to solve.
Either way I'm not here to disparage the extension cord product which I own, love and recommend. My DIY would complement it.
I'm thinking of making a way to make this cable swap of the 12 and 8 pin connectors easier. Sometimes, even after I press the release lever on one of these cable's plugs I have to push it in before I can pull it out. I think this action may help center the connector, facilitating its extraction, I'm not sure.
I envision that the DIY would involve two small wood blocks that slide over each other and lock--limited to horizontal sliding movement only, and in these blocks there would be one half of one of these 20 pin terminal blocks on one block, and two of these terminal blocks on the opposing piece of wood.
Each of 20 pin connectors above would connect to 12 and 8 pin SGW connectors, both male and female. The wood block with the one 20 pin connector would connect to female versions, like those pointed to here (ignore the rest of the "12+8 cable with the ODB2 end)
And the opposing wood block with the two 20 pair connectors would connect to male versions of the 12 + 8 pin connectors, plugged in the the JL Tazer and SWG.
As you slide the wood blocks against each other, at most one opposing pair of 20 terminal contacts would connect, pairing the factory cables with either the SGW or Tazer.
So, is this a bit "Rube Goldbergy?" I suspect so. Maybe it solves a non- or infrequent problem. Sure, you still need to unmarry the Tazer.
Question: for those of you with a JL Tazer, better with a SGW extension cable as well, do you still find disconnecting the JL Tazer and connecting the cables into the SGW via this extension cord before dealer visits, although world's easier with this extension cord, cumbersome?
Maybe not. Maybe you only do it once or twice a year on dealer visits such that even if awkward, it's infrequency leaves you with better problems to solve.
Either way I'm not here to disparage the extension cord product which I own, love and recommend. My DIY would complement it.
I'm thinking of making a way to make this cable swap of the 12 and 8 pin connectors easier. Sometimes, even after I press the release lever on one of these cable's plugs I have to push it in before I can pull it out. I think this action may help center the connector, facilitating its extraction, I'm not sure.
I envision that the DIY would involve two small wood blocks that slide over each other and lock--limited to horizontal sliding movement only, and in these blocks there would be one half of one of these 20 pin terminal blocks on one block, and two of these terminal blocks on the opposing piece of wood.
Each of 20 pin connectors above would connect to 12 and 8 pin SGW connectors, both male and female. The wood block with the one 20 pin connector would connect to female versions, like those pointed to here (ignore the rest of the "12+8 cable with the ODB2 end)
And the opposing wood block with the two 20 pair connectors would connect to male versions of the 12 + 8 pin connectors, plugged in the the JL Tazer and SWG.
As you slide the wood blocks against each other, at most one opposing pair of 20 terminal contacts would connect, pairing the factory cables with either the SGW or Tazer.
So, is this a bit "Rube Goldbergy?" I suspect so. Maybe it solves a non- or infrequent problem. Sure, you still need to unmarry the Tazer.
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