My Opinion:
1. Traction boards - will get you out of most things
2. Cheap sacrificial tow strap - use it to attach and save wear on your winch line
3. snatch block - for doubling your winch torque
4. Tree saver - for wrapping around a tree or rock
5. Gloves
6. A good flashlight
7. a couple of...
I bought one almost a year ago. I needed something in hurry for a trip from Texas to Florida and back. So far it has held up really well. Ended up driving thru a hurricane - no leaks.
This will happen if the "resistive load" is either too much or too little. The computer thinks you have a short or a bad bulb. Try LED bulbs with NO resistor pack and set your DRL as such. Also make sure you have a good ground. You can test this by temporarily running a wire from the...
Please understand that an antenna ground plane has NOTHING to do with your electrical system or battery. Aluminum or steel does not matter. Please Google "antenna ground plane purpose" and read up on this.
Cliff notes: a large metal surface (like a hood) is used to reflect signal and improve...
These are probably for a future feature that may or may not ever be implemented. Car designers try to design systems that can be used on multiple vehicles. It is much easier to design and manufacture one security system and one wiring harness instead of 50 different ones.
If I were to hazard...
The medical community is skeptical about the blood anti-body test for good reasons:
1. There has been no rigorous clinical trials of the test. (simply no time) You are essential taking a BETA version of the test.
2, Covid-19 is just a slight variation of other Covid viruses that have been...
It's been a while since I did this.. but there is a square hole on the front of the connector. (right side of your picture) Use a flat blade screwdriver inside the square hole. press in (I think). If you shine a light down the hole, you can see the catch.
These are the ones for the steel bumper (2 mounting tabs)
https://www.quadratec.com/p/mopar/led-fog-lamps-07-16-jeep-wrangler-wrangler-unlimited-jk
These are the ones for the plastic bumper (4 mounting tabs)
https://www.quadratec.com/p/mopar/led-fog-lamps-jeep-wrangler-jl
Both mount with M6 bolts
I believe the fog lights in the plastic bumper have 4 mounting tabs where steel bumper uses fog lights with two mounting tabs. I swapped mine out for leds, they direct mounted with no issues.
https://www.quadratec.com/p/mopar/led-fog-lamps-07-16-jeep-wrangler-wrangler-unlimited-jk
Just a couple of zip ties on each end and some good duct tape across the middle. Taking the plastic bumper apart, removing the harness, and re-assembling the plastic bumper takes about an hour to an hour and a half.
Yes the wiring harness from the plastic bumper will work with the Mopar fog lights. It's just a pain to disassemble the plastic bumper.
I think all the fog light bolts are metric M6. You can pick up stainless ones from nearly any hardware store or auto parts dealer.
Just touch it up with some paint. Lazy man tip: Spray a little flat black paint into a zip lock bag, then use a small paintbrush or q-tip for touch up.
I re-used the wiring harness out of the old plastic bumper because it was a direct plug-in for my new Mopar fog lights. It was a pain to disassemble the bumper and get the harness out. Took me probably 1-1/2 hours. If the harness is not a direct fit for your new lights, you might just want to...
I have a 2018 JK Rubicon bumper on my JT Sport. Fits just fine. The fog light wiring harness from the JT plastic bumper also works as well with the JK Mopar led fog lights. The plastic filler panel from the JK fits as well. You will need to drill two new holes in the back of the skid plate...
I believe the DRL and turn signal bulbs are separate bulbs in the fender. I would think you need to swap the amber turn signal bulbs to amber LEDs and set them as such with JScan before using them as DRLs.