hppants
Well-known member
(Hold your flames - I've spent 20 minutes searching for the answer to this. If it exist, I can't find it.)
When it comes to electricity, I'm not the sharpest tool in the shed. I bought the ampli-rider with the remote volume knob:
https://www.electric-avenues.com/amplirider.html
...and tested it out. Sounds great, no apparent noise revving the engine in the shop. I'm sold - it's a keeper.
Now, I want to install it pretty and I would like your help and suggestions.
1. There is no power switch on the amp, so I'm going to wire it to an "ignition hot" source. That's easy enough, but a really convenient idea would be to just run the hot wire to my "ignition hot" terminal on the automotive relay that I bought for my R/T Industries driving lights. According to Gary at Electric-Avenues, the amp only draws 0.25 amps wide open. Addidng that to the 1.7 amps my lights draw and I'm still well below the 3 amps that the relay is rated for.
Does anybody see a problem with this?
2. Regarding mounting the amp itself, I found a nice place under the rider's seat next to my accessory fuse block. But because of number 1 above, I'd have to run an "ignition hot" wire up to my lights relay under the B-panel. I think I'll just find a place inside of the front stay under the nose cowling and tie-wrap it there.
No real issues for this - just food for thought.
3. The ampli-rider volume know can be removed from its stem. I've got a nice rubber grommet that fits over the stem perfectly. So I'm gonna drill a hole in the A-panel, install the grommet, and run the stem through it for a nice touch. I picked the A-panel because I can easily use my left hand while riding to make volume adjustments.
Again, I'm good here - just setting up the real questions.
3. Input/Output wise, as a "booster", the amp just runs in line with the phone/ipod headphones output. They gave me a nice 6 foot male/female cable to plug the phone in. I suppose I could just run the cable underneath the A and B panels and tie strap it to whatever I can find, leaving a pig tail dangling near my tank bag.
But that would look like crap.
What I'd rather do is find a "bulk-head" style male/female adapter for the 1/8" audio connection that is waterproof on the outside. Something like this:
https://www.amazon.com/Hosa-Cable-GPR101-Inch-Adaptor/dp/B000068O3S/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1378902557&sr=8-1&keywords=audio+1%2F4%22+adapter
Except it would have 1/8" male on one side, 1/8" female on the other, AND it would be threaded with a nut such that I could drill a hole and install it on the A-panel next to the volume knob. It doesn't matter whether the female side or male side sticks out of the bike - I can get a cable easy enough to get to the phone output. The adapter would have this kind of mounting hardware:
https://www.ebay.com/itm/PWM-Dimmer-24-Volt-DC-7-Amp-LED-Panel-Lighting-On-Off-Switch-OC-RP-protection-/221201049096?pt=Motors_Car_Truck_Parts_Accessories&hash=item33809c2608
If it had some kind of rubber plug to keep water out of it when I'm not using it.
The last step would be to purchase a similar adapter for the headphones, of course this one would have to have the female on the outside to accept my ear buds.
So, that's a long story but I've learned enough from this forum NOT to re-invent the wheel.
Has anyone else addressed some of my concerns?
Thanks.
When it comes to electricity, I'm not the sharpest tool in the shed. I bought the ampli-rider with the remote volume knob:
https://www.electric-avenues.com/amplirider.html
...and tested it out. Sounds great, no apparent noise revving the engine in the shop. I'm sold - it's a keeper.
Now, I want to install it pretty and I would like your help and suggestions.
1. There is no power switch on the amp, so I'm going to wire it to an "ignition hot" source. That's easy enough, but a really convenient idea would be to just run the hot wire to my "ignition hot" terminal on the automotive relay that I bought for my R/T Industries driving lights. According to Gary at Electric-Avenues, the amp only draws 0.25 amps wide open. Addidng that to the 1.7 amps my lights draw and I'm still well below the 3 amps that the relay is rated for.
Does anybody see a problem with this?
2. Regarding mounting the amp itself, I found a nice place under the rider's seat next to my accessory fuse block. But because of number 1 above, I'd have to run an "ignition hot" wire up to my lights relay under the B-panel. I think I'll just find a place inside of the front stay under the nose cowling and tie-wrap it there.
No real issues for this - just food for thought.
3. The ampli-rider volume know can be removed from its stem. I've got a nice rubber grommet that fits over the stem perfectly. So I'm gonna drill a hole in the A-panel, install the grommet, and run the stem through it for a nice touch. I picked the A-panel because I can easily use my left hand while riding to make volume adjustments.
Again, I'm good here - just setting up the real questions.
3. Input/Output wise, as a "booster", the amp just runs in line with the phone/ipod headphones output. They gave me a nice 6 foot male/female cable to plug the phone in. I suppose I could just run the cable underneath the A and B panels and tie strap it to whatever I can find, leaving a pig tail dangling near my tank bag.
But that would look like crap.
What I'd rather do is find a "bulk-head" style male/female adapter for the 1/8" audio connection that is waterproof on the outside. Something like this:
https://www.amazon.com/Hosa-Cable-GPR101-Inch-Adaptor/dp/B000068O3S/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1378902557&sr=8-1&keywords=audio+1%2F4%22+adapter
Except it would have 1/8" male on one side, 1/8" female on the other, AND it would be threaded with a nut such that I could drill a hole and install it on the A-panel next to the volume knob. It doesn't matter whether the female side or male side sticks out of the bike - I can get a cable easy enough to get to the phone output. The adapter would have this kind of mounting hardware:
https://www.ebay.com/itm/PWM-Dimmer-24-Volt-DC-7-Amp-LED-Panel-Lighting-On-Off-Switch-OC-RP-protection-/221201049096?pt=Motors_Car_Truck_Parts_Accessories&hash=item33809c2608
If it had some kind of rubber plug to keep water out of it when I'm not using it.
The last step would be to purchase a similar adapter for the headphones, of course this one would have to have the female on the outside to accept my ear buds.
So, that's a long story but I've learned enough from this forum NOT to re-invent the wheel.
Has anyone else addressed some of my concerns?
Thanks.