shiggsy
Member Since: 13 Jan 2013
Location: Kent
Posts: 799
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Best place to route an exterior to interior power cable | |
I'd like to fit a permament power cable that ends in the drivers area, accesible from the exterior of the vehicle without the need to open the bonnet, doors tailgate. The obvious point is where a towing hook power cable is routed up infront of the spare wheel. Its then just a case of routing it down to the front, (don't know how much of a job that would be, I wouldn't want to go near any of the air bags.) Are there any alternatives, like coming in from the front?
The reason being I'd like to have the same setup as my previous car where I had a mains powered Defa Fan Heater fitted. That car had pillarless doors, which meant the window had to drop a cm before you could open it and in freezing weather it wouldn't, even if it did the door would freeze shut as well. I got fed up standing outside each morning for 20 minutes with a hairdryer defrosting the door, so enter the Defa.
I had it hooked over the front seat flap, canted over to point at the door and it could be left in situ for the winter. It was connected to a power cable I had routed from under the drivers seat, under the carpet to the side of the car and then back into the boot, through the rear wing vent flap and down to the rear diffuser where I had a capped plug (flymo) velcro'd onto the rear diffuser shelf. So in the evening, if it was going to be icy in the morning, I would simply plug the car into a power cable connected to a Programmable plug socket, set to come on half an hour before I got into the car. Door would open, windows wouldnt need scraping, interior wasn't cold.
It won't be a necessity on the Freelander like the previous car, although I have read one account of one person having to climb in the tailgate because all the doors where frozen, but seeing as I already have it, it would be a nicety.
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