Notice: We request that you don't just set up a new account at this time if you are a previous user.
If you used to be one of our moderators, please feel free to reach out to Chris via the facebook Outerlimits4x4 group and he will get you set back up with access should he need you.
If you used to be one of our moderators, please feel free to reach out to Chris via the facebook Outerlimits4x4 group and he will get you set back up with access should he need you.
Recovery:If you cannot access your old email address and don't remember your password, please click here to log a change of email address so you can do a password reset.
Dual batteries in a Feroza
Moderator: Tiny
more.
No extra holes were drilled to fit the holder. It bolts onto existing chassis bolts, I simply fitted longer high tensile bolts through the chassis points to hold it in. The controller is the Electronics Australia kit (commonly known as the Dick Smith or Jaycar kit) and costs $50 for the kit plus some more for the wiring and fuseholders etc. Aux won't charge until the main is over 13.5V and if the aux is below 10.xV then the charge current is limited to prolong battery life.
No extra holes were drilled to fit the holder. It bolts onto existing chassis bolts, I simply fitted longer high tensile bolts through the chassis points to hold it in. The controller is the Electronics Australia kit (commonly known as the Dick Smith or Jaycar kit) and costs $50 for the kit plus some more for the wiring and fuseholders etc. Aux won't charge until the main is over 13.5V and if the aux is below 10.xV then the charge current is limited to prolong battery life.
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.
David
Yes the height's the killer if you've got A/C fitted- the pipes get in the way and you can't make the tray sit any lower.AJFeroza wrote: I took it out coz I couldn't fit a big enough battery in there... not enough height.
I've had a few PM's and Emails of late- those photos will stay up for as long as I'm with this ISP (I've no plans on changing.)
David
murcod wrote:Yes the height's the killer if you've got A/C fitted- the pipes get in the way and you can't make the tray sit any lower.AJFeroza wrote: I took it out coz I couldn't fit a big enough battery in there... not enough height.
I've had a few PM's and Emails of late- those photos will stay up for as long as I'm with this ISP (I've no plans on changing.)
David
Is the battery maintanince free
I went to battery world and they had 2 different batteries that are the same size but the guy I spoke to suggested not to get a maintanince free one due to all the heat coming off the extractors.
BTW what is the stuff you are using around the outside of the battery
Thanx
James
James
94 cxi feroza- coiled rear!!! SOLD !!!!!
05 s/cab 5L-e hilux- bring on the mods
94 cxi feroza- coiled rear!!! SOLD !!!!!
05 s/cab 5L-e hilux- bring on the mods
Yes, it's a maintenance free battery with one of those "magic eye" indicators that tell you when the charge or acid levels are low. I've had it in there for a couple of years (recently removed for the gearbox rebuild and not refitted) without any problems.
These days maitenance free batteries are supposed to have a waterproof membrane that lets them breath but stops any of the electrolyte escaping. If I'm buying a battery I go for the highest capacity with the longest warranty- you can get three year warrantees these days on cheap batteries. If it dies within three years you get a new one.
I've got the battery sitting on some 6mm thick rubber and the stuff around it is heat reflective with about 10mm of foam rubber. I think it's used on building aircons - got it off the father inlaw and he does commercial aircon installs?
These days maitenance free batteries are supposed to have a waterproof membrane that lets them breath but stops any of the electrolyte escaping. If I'm buying a battery I go for the highest capacity with the longest warranty- you can get three year warrantees these days on cheap batteries. If it dies within three years you get a new one.
I've got the battery sitting on some 6mm thick rubber and the stuff around it is heat reflective with about 10mm of foam rubber. I think it's used on building aircons - got it off the father inlaw and he does commercial aircon installs?
David
Nice job - looks strong enough to survive some real use. And a good idea
to protect it from the exhaust heat - mine has melted the outer sheathing off the loom that runs behind the exhaust.
A layer of fibreglass tape now protects it - so don't underestimate the heat load.
And..... how on earth do you keep the engine bay that clean ? The first
bog hole I drive through coats everything under the bonnet with an even
brown/grey color........
to protect it from the exhaust heat - mine has melted the outer sheathing off the loom that runs behind the exhaust.
A layer of fibreglass tape now protects it - so don't underestimate the heat load.
And..... how on earth do you keep the engine bay that clean ? The first
bog hole I drive through coats everything under the bonnet with an even
brown/grey color........
That's an old pic and I'd obviously recently cleaned it. Having an electric thermo fan helps too- I disable it and don't get mud sprayed throughout the engine bay.MightyMouse wrote: And..... how on earth do you keep the engine bay that clean ? The first
bog hole I drive through coats everything under the bonnet with an even
brown/grey color........
Sadly mine hasn't been off road for a long time.
David
Do you also have an electric fan instead of the mechanic one? Does anyone have any informations on how to fit and plug electric fan with a switch (on,off). Whats the benefit of not having a mechanic fan?
www.ferozaclub.gr
[url=http://www.ferozaclub.gr][img]http://i51.photobucket.com/albums/f387/heroicentaur/forum/sign.gif[/img][/url]
[url=http://www.ferozaclub.gr][img]http://i51.photobucket.com/albums/f387/heroicentaur/forum/sign.gif[/img][/url]
Benefit is you can turn it off when water crossing and it takes no power from your engine to turn it.ferozamaniac wrote:Do you also have an electric fan instead of the mechanic one? Does anyone have any informations on how to fit and plug electric fan with a switch (on,off). Whats the benefit of not having a mechanic fan?
Downfalls are lesser cooling and more load on electrical system.
You can buy a fan and a water temperature switch, so it comes on automatically, or have it wired into the dash also.
[quote="RockyF70 - Coming out of the closet"]i'd be rushing out and buying an IFS rocky[/quote]
If you go to an electric fan, be carefully when you install it.
I initially used an electric thermostat and had it set too low at first. the fan overcooled the radiator and with the engine thermostat in the water
inlet ( stupid idea ) it wouldn't open.
The cylinderhead was over hot with the bottom radiator hose being stone cold.
IMO - start with the thermostat at the "hot" end of its range and turn it down to the right point.
Shifting the engine water thermostat into the top hose works well - but requires access to a machine shop - and I don't really like the aftermarket
thermostats - the small line from the bulb on the end to the thermostat
body easily breaks with vibration. Mine now hooks into the EFI system -
once again works well but isn't simple to do unless you have some knowledge.
I initially used an electric thermostat and had it set too low at first. the fan overcooled the radiator and with the engine thermostat in the water
inlet ( stupid idea ) it wouldn't open.
The cylinderhead was over hot with the bottom radiator hose being stone cold.
IMO - start with the thermostat at the "hot" end of its range and turn it down to the right point.
Shifting the engine water thermostat into the top hose works well - but requires access to a machine shop - and I don't really like the aftermarket
thermostats - the small line from the bulb on the end to the thermostat
body easily breaks with vibration. Mine now hooks into the EFI system -
once again works well but isn't simple to do unless you have some knowledge.
Some advice from my experience with fitting an electric thermo fan-
* make sure you've got a genuine Daihatsu thermostat (they're not that dear to buy and are far superior to aftermarket brands.)
* make up a full shroud so the fan covers the whole of the radiator
* use decent sized cabling as even a small voltage drop will make a noticeable difference to the fan speed
* consider upgrading the alternator so it can cope when idling with a higher current draw.
* search the FAQ thread!!
* make sure you've got a genuine Daihatsu thermostat (they're not that dear to buy and are far superior to aftermarket brands.)
* make up a full shroud so the fan covers the whole of the radiator
* use decent sized cabling as even a small voltage drop will make a noticeable difference to the fan speed
* consider upgrading the alternator so it can cope when idling with a higher current draw.
* search the FAQ thread!!
David
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest