Sounds great mate I look forward to the pics !
Steve
Edited to add details here in the first post.
OK. Here is a summary of what I did and in order of how I did it. Pic at end which I will update in a few weeks when I tidy it up more and have all the trim back on the car.
Tablet
Bought a Nexus 7 32GB Wifi 2013 edition: Good size to fit in the spot where the cubby hole is.
Kernel Change (flashing the tablet)
Installed Timur's Kernel: allows deep sleep (long standby battery life) but still an almost instant turn on when the ignition is turned on. Also allows charging while using an OTG cable which is quite important if you plan on using any usb device on the tablet.
Homescreen customisation
Installed Nova Launcher just because it has a few good gestures to access he menu's and can make the homescreen very bare to start with.
Made a Wallpaper in GIMP that looks just like I want it to look, including fake icons but not the Widgets.
Used an App called Desktop Visualizer to make transparent shortcuts over the top of the wallpaper where I made the fake icons. This way it all looks like however you like it to look.
Used an app called Folder Organizer so I can make shortcuts using the app above but have customised folders open up with that category of apps in it. For instance, GPS shortcut open up a folder view of all the GPS programs I have.
Other Apps
Installed Tasker to automate a few things like a button to bring up the volume from the homescreen as the buttons are behind the dash now and also a button that turns Wifi Hotspot on my phone without having to pull my phone out of my pocket.
Installed Mediamonkey for music app primarily for its good databasing and autoplaylists while utilising wifi syncing of my music ratings and video to all devices including my PC.
Installed GPS programs including Locus for decent offroad maps.
Installed automotive apps like Torque but haven't used yet.
Installed Tablet Talk to display call and text details on the tablet even though they are actually on my phone (as the tablet is wifi only)
Other Hardware
OTG cable hub to allow 2 USB devices to be connected to the tablet and also charge at the same time.
USB Dac to give better audio than in built Dac (digital to analog converter) of the tablet. Also hoped this would stop ground hum/whine that seems to come from the alternator when I used the 3.5mm previously. May have been able to fix that other ways but I liked the idea of an external USB Dac anyway.
3.5mm output of the Dac goed to the second input of my aftermarket headunit.
Charger made using a 12V plug USB device that I pulled apart so the charger runs from the Accessory feed.
Bluetooth OBD II plug to monitor some ECU values
Physical Mods and mounting
Pulled centre dash trim out (the one with the switches) and everything out of it. Pulled the cover off that goes over the HEVAC temp sensor below the clock, that also is the front of the cubby hole. Cut the cubby whole out as far as I could do to the face of the trim.
Placed the tablet in behind to get a sense of how much more needed to be cut. Found the Nexus 7 2013 just fit, well almost perfectly top and bottom as well as from the right to the clock. Found that having the USB port facing to the passenger side (clock side) was best as I needed access to the usb port on the tablet but not necessarily the audio socket (it's that tight).
Trimmed the opening at the top and bottom edges just enough to see the whole screen. Works out pretty good with cutting for this size of tablet. Then trimmed the drivers side of the trim more so the gap between the screen and the trim was balanced each side.
Then used silicon to stick the tablet to the trim and also also acts as a filler so there are no gaps around the edges of the tablet. Made the beads almost square as it looks better than a bead like you see in bathrooms.
I could have kept the clock if I made a right angle micro usb connector with flat ribbon cable as the space would be really tight but decided I didn't need the clock and put a USB input face I made out of thin PVC sheet. This meant I could just plug the OTG cable with no mods to the connector.
Cut the trim that covered the HEVAC temp sensor and cubby hole face so it only covered the HEVAC temp sensor location.
I then spray painted the whole trim using matt black latex spray paint as I figured I peel it all off if I didn't like it or wanted to make more mods.
Before putting back together I had to trim the hard plastic part of the dash a little more than the thickness of the tablet on the drivers side and the bottom part thats above the headunit. Didn't like doing it but have no worry's about structural aspects, not can you see it with the trim back on anyway.
How would I do some things better if I did it again?
I'd just have a normal single din headunit rather than my single din flip out and up touchscreen unit I have. Reason being is that I will only use the headunit for radio, amplifier/volume and reverse camera. And the reverse camera could be hooked up to the tablet if need be. This would allow the headunit to sit further back into the dash as there is no need ot have it sticking out for the screen to fold out. This would look a little tidier I feel. But I am not that worried so sticking with the headunit I have. You could do away with a headunit all together and just run an amplifier, as well as add a radio usb device to the nexus.
I will however be pulling the trim back out again when I do the blend motors and redo the silicon beads much better. Will also repaint the trim again as I know I can do it better next time using the same latex paint, but with more preps before painting.
Why I am happy I did it?
The music ratings and playlists are just so much better. All my digital media is synced and the most I listen to music is in the car so now I can rate and have all the play counts recorded where I listen most. Also wifi sync is great for the in car.
Basically I can make the homescreen look however I want it.
I can add a lot of functions and apps because the Nexus device is fairly good when it comes to development, and Android is just great with flexibility and apps unless you're an Apple fanboy
The device acts like it is designed for a car with the Timur kernel.
I can have GPS and music all working through the car stereo at one time with the music made quieter when the GPS wants to talk.
When my phone rings or gets a message the info will display on the tablet and the sound will go through the stereo like a handsfree. So even though its my phone getting the call or text, it will appear as though its all through the tablet.
Thinking in future I wil utilise the Torque monitoring of coolant temp on the OBD plug and alarm if over temp. Means I need to be listening to it though. Might look into tasker intercepting the alarm and acting visually as well.
Sounds great mate I look forward to the pics !
Steve
Excellent work! also looking forward to the pics.
If you get a RFI problem from stray earth currents, the Jaycar 10Amp filter (AA3074) for $15 works extremely well...
No doubt you can select Bluetooth and feed the Torque App from the OBDII port..? "Glass cockpit" of sorts....who'd have thought it possible...![]()
MY99 RR P38 HSE 4.6 (Thor) gone (to Tasmania)
2020 Subaru Impreza S ('SWMBO's Express' )
2023 Ineos Grenadier Trialmaster (diesel)
This post details all moved to the first post. All updates I will add to the first post but make a comment here to say look up
Update to first post regards using the Jaycar 12VDC filter as there ended up being minor whine at 3000rpm and above.
I can hear Hoges saying "Told you so" ha ha. I thought the Dac would help eliminate it. Super quiet now.
Edit: Turns out I can't update the first post anymore. Is that because I've edited it too many times or there is a time limit?
Also added an app called "Music Control Plus" for floating music controls so I can still change music tracks while running a GPS app etc.
Great Work! Am impressed that the tablet's GPS antenna operates OK buried inside the dash! Very innovative... look forward to hearing of further progress... then I'll try and muster the courage to do likewise!![]()
MY99 RR P38 HSE 4.6 (Thor) gone (to Tasmania)
2020 Subaru Impreza S ('SWMBO's Express' )
2023 Ineos Grenadier Trialmaster (diesel)
A lot of things fell into place and some areas expanded as it was developing. Didn't envision the USB Dac, didn't envision I'd still need to filter the power, didn't realise how tight this particular tablet was going to be (I'd be cautious on any tablet that is wider or longer as it only just fit before having to break through the sides of the trim).
Haven't noticed any loss of satellites for the GPS, which is good as I didn't really want to take the tablet apart to get to the internal aerial.
Really happy with it. Much better than the the one and only Apple product it has replaced (ipod connectivity to my headunit) as one I no longer have an Apple product (I can feel the hatred from some about this comment ha ha) and two the functionality and flexibility is so much better.
Pete38
As a user of an iMac home computer, a Windows laptop an iPad tablet and an Android HTC phone, I agree with you. Apple would have to be the worst thing to connect to. There are time it really does my head in. However, there are times when SWMBO Android tablet will not connect to the home WiFi due to low signal and the iPad works fine, i ended up having to install a repeater in the house for her. Too many gadgets and not enough time
Gary
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