A couple of small updates:
Small cosmetic/lighting update:
I picked up a Francis spot light, normally for military use on Austin Champs, and Land Rovers, but they did see a bit of civilian use I've found.

A photo of it mounted on a champ, quite large:

I was planning on mounting this in the same place, LHS, in front of the mirror..
I'll need to ensure this is well within QLD TMR regs for work/search lamps.
As far as I can see, for worklamps:
source 1, worklamps:
http://www.tmr.qld.gov.au/-/media/Sa...G240.pdf?la=en
A lamp for the temporary purpose of reading signs, examining and/or making adjustments or repairs to the vehicle and /or managing its load (e.g. search lamp or work light) can be used, provided:
? The vehicle is stationary and the light is being used for making adjustments or repairs to a vehicle, or being used in an ?off road? situation, or
? the light is used temporarily to read a house number or notice board.
source 2, Driving lights:
http://www.tmr.qld.gov.au/-/media/Sa...psv3.pdf?la=en

Makes me think from a work light point of view it's fine, with a switch on dash, and on the light.. and only use it when the car is stationary.
It might be an issue regarding the car profile, but if it's inline with the wing mirror and isn't obstructing view, it should be fine.. Bit of a grey area, I may get TMR to confirm.. Anyone fitted anything like this?
Also, another somewhat cosmetic change:
I'm keen to add a radio (with bluetooth), once I get soundproofing installed it should be useful at least. However, I'm keen to retain the look of an older head unit, rather than a new one.
So I decided to gut an old radio, clean it up, and just wire up the switches to the new amp/radio.
Pulling radio apart:

Removed relevant parts

A bit of a clean up, probably will repaint this too:

Moving the push switches over should be easy, along with the volume knob, as the new amp has a volume knob. However the track seek / fm search on the new radio is 2 push buttons.. and I thought it'd be cool to get this working with the original rotary knob..
I'm aware of rotary encoders which would help with this, but this would require a logic circuit and is a bit more effort, then I came across Rotary Pulses Switches which would just be a direct switch over for the potentiometer.
The switch sends an on/off pulse a certain numbers of times for each revolution when rotated, and a different circuit is pulsed when rotated in the other direction, perfect.. Here's the circuit diagram:

Here's the part if anyone is interested, they're about $2 each from Aliexpress:
SRBM Series - Basic information
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