Pathfinder II
Advocate II
Thanks, its pretty awesome.Wow, looked like a lot of work. End result looks good.
Advocate II
They have a lot of lights on their website and a bunch of buy one get one deals. I will definitely purchase a larger one from them.That's a nice price for those LED lightbars. all diff sizes too...
That is a sweet set up. I like the roof rack idea so I think I will do that next with a 42" or something close to that.View attachment 1642 View attachment 1643 View attachment 1644 I did something similar, using the low cost CREE LED bars from Amazon. Except I ran a fused bus directly from the battery, wired relays and had a switch panel made from Front Panel Express. I can have the light on with the engine off, which is nice for momentary use. The rear lights are for backing up (helps the rearview camera a lot) and for setting camp. Last weekend we set camp in the dark and the lights were awesome. Over Christmas we abandoned camp in the dark and the light was awesome.
The only problem I've found is that the lightbar isn't sealed as well as the $1000 versions and it had some condensation in it. I can buy a LOT of replacements before I get to the cost of one of the big name bars. With the freightliner/ARB style switches you can power them without illuminating the faces, which is what I did so I wouldn't kill my battery with them always on.
I have 2 more cubes waiting for when I finish fabricating the front bumper, another short lightbar will go on it too...well that's the plan, I might go with plan B with putting the cubes on the sides of the rack.That is a sweet set up. I like the roof rack idea so I think I will do that next with a 42" or something close to that.
I have the same low cost Amazon Cree led bars, I read a review about the condensation problem so when mine arrived I disasembled the light and discovered that the seal under the lens is poor and the screws around the outer trim piece were too tight causing the lens to warp and make the crappy seal even worse, but everything else is water tight. So I put a bead of rtv silicone between the trim ring and the lens and loosened the screws a bit. I cleaned up the excess rtv so you can't even tell its there. I've had mine mounted for a couple of months here in soggy western Washington and I haven't had any condensation yet.View attachment 1642 View attachment 1643 View attachment 1644 I did something similar, using the low cost CREE LED bars from Amazon. Except I ran a fused bus directly from the battery, wired relays and had a switch panel made from Front Panel Express. I can have the light on with the engine off, which is nice for momentary use. The rear lights are for backing up (helps the rearview camera a lot) and for setting camp. Last weekend we set camp in the dark and the lights were awesome. Over Christmas we abandoned camp in the dark and the light was awesome.
The only problem I've found is that the lightbar isn't sealed as well as the $1000 versions and it had some condensation in it. I can buy a LOT of replacements before I get to the cost of one of the big name bars. With the freightliner/ARB style switches you can power them without illuminating the faces, which is what I did so I wouldn't kill my battery with them always on.
I might have to do that. Thanks for the heads up!I have the same low cost Amazon Cree led bars, I read a review about the condensation problem so when mine arrived I disasembled the light and discovered that the seal under the lens is poor and the screws around the outer trim piece were too tight causing the lens to warp and make the crappy seal even worse, but everything else is water tight. So I put a bead of rtv silicone between the trim ring and the lens and loosened the screws a bit. I cleaned up the excess rtv so you can't even tell its there. I've had mine mounted for a couple of months here in soggy western Washington and I haven't had any condensation yet.
Advocate II
Very nice, i'm hoping to do the same in the coming months