squeezer
Squirrelly Geezer
My Friday night project:
I wanted a visual alert for my Escort radar detector instead of the annoying beeps -- and their accompanying need for some kind of mixer -- but didn't like the cost of the aftermarket stuff. I also like stuff that looks more or less stock and I like to be able to leave it on the bike.
So... with plenty of space behind dash panel B, I decided to stick an LED and plug there.
Here's the final result. The led is on the upper left and I have the cord plugged into the socket so you can see where it goes.
final pic:
This is an amazingly easy project. The light is this 5mm ultra bright led with metal casing:
The socket is this standard 3.5mm mono jack:
Just drill two holes in the panel, solder the bits together, and you're ready to roll.
Here's the back of panel B showing the connection. I cleaned it up a little and taped the wire to the panel to make sure things didn't float around in there. Since it's self-contained, it doesn't muck up panel removal later.
The bits came from https://allelectronics.com/.
5mm ultra bright led w/metal case, red -- catalog number ind-13r -- $1.75
3.5mm mono open audio phone jack -- catalog number mmj -- $0.45
Shipping -- $7.00 <_<
Obviously, if you have a decent electronics hobby shop near you and some hook-up wire laying around, it will cost a little over 2 bucks. Radio Shack didn't have what I wanted, so I went on-line to save time.
Info for electronic newbs:
You'd normally use a step down resistor when hooking up an LED. Here's a quick
LED hook-up guide about that.
I didn't. Following this discussion on sport-touring.net, I'm just using the Escort's volume knob as a variable resistor. If I burn the LED out, I'll come back here and report how I fixed it. No news is good news.
As far as hooking things up, the longer wire on the LED is for the positive wire. On the jack, the terminal that sticks out of the side is the negative. Hook the positive wire to the terminal on the back that is on the other side of the negative terminal. The third one is for a circuit that would be open when there isn't something plugged in. You won't need it for this project. I snipped it off.
And, yes, this thing is bright as hell. You can't miss it. You'll need to turn it down at night. My radar detector plugs into a socket on a circuit with a toggle switch near my throttle hand so I can flip it off in a hurry. Those kinds of details you can work out yourself.
Enjoy!
I wanted a visual alert for my Escort radar detector instead of the annoying beeps -- and their accompanying need for some kind of mixer -- but didn't like the cost of the aftermarket stuff. I also like stuff that looks more or less stock and I like to be able to leave it on the bike.
So... with plenty of space behind dash panel B, I decided to stick an LED and plug there.
Here's the final result. The led is on the upper left and I have the cord plugged into the socket so you can see where it goes.
final pic:
This is an amazingly easy project. The light is this 5mm ultra bright led with metal casing:
The socket is this standard 3.5mm mono jack:
Just drill two holes in the panel, solder the bits together, and you're ready to roll.
Here's the back of panel B showing the connection. I cleaned it up a little and taped the wire to the panel to make sure things didn't float around in there. Since it's self-contained, it doesn't muck up panel removal later.
The bits came from https://allelectronics.com/.
5mm ultra bright led w/metal case, red -- catalog number ind-13r -- $1.75
3.5mm mono open audio phone jack -- catalog number mmj -- $0.45
Shipping -- $7.00 <_<
Obviously, if you have a decent electronics hobby shop near you and some hook-up wire laying around, it will cost a little over 2 bucks. Radio Shack didn't have what I wanted, so I went on-line to save time.
Info for electronic newbs:
You'd normally use a step down resistor when hooking up an LED. Here's a quick
LED hook-up guide about that.
I didn't. Following this discussion on sport-touring.net, I'm just using the Escort's volume knob as a variable resistor. If I burn the LED out, I'll come back here and report how I fixed it. No news is good news.
As far as hooking things up, the longer wire on the LED is for the positive wire. On the jack, the terminal that sticks out of the side is the negative. Hook the positive wire to the terminal on the back that is on the other side of the negative terminal. The third one is for a circuit that would be open when there isn't something plugged in. You won't need it for this project. I snipped it off.
And, yes, this thing is bright as hell. You can't miss it. You'll need to turn it down at night. My radar detector plugs into a socket on a circuit with a toggle switch near my throttle hand so I can flip it off in a hurry. Those kinds of details you can work out yourself.
Enjoy!