| I made up a wiring plan for the dash, then constructed it as follows:
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| Downloaded Big Cee's outline for the dashboard, and worked with it on the computer to produce and print a pattern on stiff cardboard stock that I could trace onto aluminum and cut out.
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| Also, using a graphics package and to-scale outlines of the various components, I experimented with different component placement to find a layout that would fit everything in neatly.
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| I traced the outline onto heavy aluminum, cut it with a jig saw, and smoothed the edges with a file.
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| The slots were cut with a small vertical milling machines. (One could do this by drilling and filing.)
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| Likewise, the rectangular cutout for the voltmeter could be drilled and filed, but is much easier to cut out on the milling machine.
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| I cut small aluminum flanges from 90-degree angle aluminum,
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| and fitted them to the slots in the dash so they would support it and provide hanging points. (They are spaced to hang from the KLR's windscreen mounting screws.)
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| Then, working with the layout diagram produced on the computer, I continued measuring and drilling for all the other components.
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| The hanging flanges are mounted with stainless screws, backed up by epoxy.
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| Then the whole unit was spray painted black, with "krinkle coat" paint.
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| And all the components mounted in their holes.
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| While wiring, I kept the dash on a piece of foam to avoid scratching the painted surface or the face of the meter.
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| Using a printout of the wiring diagram, I then wired everything with point-to-point wiring, solder, and a few spade connectors. The I/O from the panel goes to a standard 9-pin automotive connector.
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| Then I gathered the wires from this mess into neat bundles and tidied up with electrical tape.
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| Replacing the windshield mounting screws with longer ones, the dash hangs from those screws, and is held in place by stainless nuts.
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| The grips are wired to the I/O connector. The "Vest" circuit runs back under the tank and seat to the left side panel,
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| to a 1/4" phone plug connector with a spring-loaded cover. A 1/4" phone plug on my electric vest plugs in here.
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| Unfortunately, the Givi Bags installed later blocked access to this jack, so I added a plastic component box on the back of the Givi rack, and the connector now goes in there. The spring-loaded cover didn't fit, so I keep a dummy 1/4" right angle plug in the hole as a cover when it's not in use.
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