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Thread: Traxide battery tray

  1. #11
    LRD414's Avatar
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    Traxide battery tray

    Quote Originally Posted by BMKal View Post
    ....Where the battery tray sits, there is a wiring loom running across the top of the wheel arch. You need to remove the clips securing this to the bodywork and lift the loom, then slide the battery tray in under the wiring loom. The loom will then run over the top of the tray alongside the base of the battery....

    This point is where I found the instructions confusing. I read it as one loom needed to be left to run under the new tray. This should not be done. Anyway, all wiring is now run along the edge of the cranking battery box, safe out of harms way.

    The headlight removal was included in the instructions from Tim. Made the tray fitting much easier. Perhaps it's an update to the instructions.

    Just noticed Brian's battery clamp is a much better version than supplied with mine. Mine is plastic and the j-bolts much longer ones. Perhaps this is why some people have the bolts hit the bonnet.

    Scott
    D4 TDV6 MY14 with Llams, Tuffant Wheels, Traxide DBS, APT sliders & protection plates, Prospeed Winch Mount w/ Carbon 12K, Mitch Hitch & Drifta Drawers
    Link to my D4 Build Thread
    D3 2005 V8 Petrol
    Ex '77 RRC 2 door. Long gone but not forgotten.

  2. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by LRD414 View Post
    This point is where I found the instructions confusing. I read it as one loom needed to be left to run under the new tray. This should not be done. Anyway, all wiring is now run along the edge of the cranking battery box, safe out of harms way.

    The headlight removal was included in the instructions from Tim. Made the tray fitting much easier. Perhaps it's an update to the instructions.

    Just noticed Brian's battery clamp is a much better version than supplied with mine. Mine is plastic and the j-bolts much longer ones. Perhaps this is why some people have the bolts hit the bonnet.

    Scott
    Yes - my kit sat in the shed for about 2 years before I installed it just prior to Melrose this year. Tim told me that he had issued updated instructions since mine - but I'm not sure if it would have helped me in any case. I have an ARB bulbar, and I don't think I can remove the headlights with that in place.

    Surprised at the difference in battery clamp supplied though, given that mine is not the latest version of Tim's kit. I had noticed the difference in your photo.
    Cheers .........

    BMKAL


  3. #13
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    HiBMKal, that tray was the one I originally supplied with my kits but the importer changed the shape of the hold down bracket and the trays fitted location.

    The changes meant that both the bracket and the tray would rub against the plastic reservoir if not fitted perfectly.

    So I developed my own, and made them out of stainless, instead of the original painted steel one.

    As to the ?J? bolts. They will just touch the insulation on the underside of the bonnet but go nowhere near the actual bonnet. So there is no need to trim them down.

  4. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by RHS58 View Post
    I shortened them too for the same reason.
    Did it myself as I couldn't afford the fees of an orthopaedic surgeon.

    Ron
    Yeah ditto. Got serious and used the angle grinder ☺
    Now 2016 D4 HSE 'Leo' and Steve the Triumph Speed Twin
    Then 2010 D4 3.0 HSE 'James'
    Then 2010 RRS TDV8 'Roger' w traxide DBS, UHF, Cooper Zeons, Superchips remap
    Then 2010 D4 TDV6 'Jumbo' w traxide DBS
    First love 2002 D2 TD5 'Disco Stu'

  5. #15
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    Quote Originally Posted by Lotz-A-Landies View Post
    Orthopaedic surgeons are more carpenters than doctors!

    ....
    He's always been a yachtie so instead of choosing medicine, he ticked naval architecture and got a Navy scholarship. But after two years of mechanical engineering, he decided he wanted medicine. But because he had not ticked #1 as being medicine, they would not let him into medicine, despite his marks being way above medicine's entry. He switched to science, ending up with a masters science degree, and took off a year to earn some money to keep him going. Eventually he got into medicine. All because he ticked the wrong box at 17 years of age.

    But he reckons his two years of mechanical engineering has made him a much better orthopaedic surgeon. He's certainly good with a saw and a file, got it done straight, I'ver not had to contact the AMA about any complications.

  6. #16
    LRD414's Avatar
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    Yesterday I did a 2nd Traxide install to Dad's D4. I thought it worth showing a photo of how we mounted the wiring loom out of the way.
    Holes were drilled into the battery box to make use of the factory clips in the loom. Clips were inserted with a bit of silicon for sealing.



    The smaller of the two looms (not shown) was shifted out of the way to the left of this photo and tied to another factory loom. It is the unused fuel burning heater loom that includes two plugs with blanking plates. It could have also been run along the battery box but that looked a bit congested (small gap to aux battery).

    Everything else was as per the instructions. The other loose cable in the photo is just the UHF aerial cable that was run at the same time as Traxide.

    Cheers,
    Scott
    D4 TDV6 MY14 with Llams, Tuffant Wheels, Traxide DBS, APT sliders & protection plates, Prospeed Winch Mount w/ Carbon 12K, Mitch Hitch & Drifta Drawers
    Link to my D4 Build Thread
    D3 2005 V8 Petrol
    Ex '77 RRC 2 door. Long gone but not forgotten.

  7. #17
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    That looks good Scott. Much tidier than my effort of just laying the loom along the top edge of the battery tray and squeezing the battery in next to it.

    You wouldn't have to try too hard to convince anyone that it was done like that in the factory.
    Cheers .........

    BMKAL


  8. #18
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    I recently completed mine, and with that smaller FBH loom I just covered it with split tube and ran it under the battery tray anyway, per the Traxide installation notes, leaving the unused plugs in situ on the inner guard.
    Brilliant kit, so rewarding to install as other have said many times. I did mine in stages, taking it very slowly and clocking about 8-9 hours of very satisfying effort. Big thanks to Scott, Tim, and so many others on here for their recommendations and contributions on here!

  9. #19
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    If this battery fits here in a D4 is there any reason why the same could not be done on a 2009 RRS

  10. #20
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    That battery tray is a great improvement on the old style.

    I will have to eventually change mine to the new style.

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