JohnK
05-22-2020, 04:52 PM
I'd love some feedback from everyone on my idea of where to mount an E-Stopp electric parking brake actuator. In particular, whether mounting it here will be problematic down the road as far as accessing roll bar or harness bolts, or any other issues that are not obvious to me at the moment since I haven't built a roadster before.
I know that several folks have installed E-Stopps in their roadsters, but there's not a ton of information out there on how they did it. From what I gather most folks have installed the actuator in the trans tunnel. I've been playing around with that, as well as other ideas, and think I may have come up with something that will work. The basic idea comes from how Revology trunk-mounts the E-Stopp in their Mustangs (photo 1 below). I'm thinking of mounting the E-Stopp across the forward portion of the trunk, just behind the front roll bar mounts. The width is enough to be able to get a 6-7" bend radius in the cable. When the cable and housing is curved like this in the mock-up it seems to still operate perfectly smoothly and without any additional resistance. The second photo shows the basic layout and dimensions of how everything would fit together, except the entire setup would be mounted on a sheetmetal plate upside-down and suspended from the two upper side 3/4' tubes. Image 3 is my (VERY) crude napkin sketch of how the plate would look. It would have folded edges on the long sides to stiffen it and to make a shield of sorts from stuff accidentally getting stuck in the mechanism if you carelessly stuff a jacket in the trunk. Photo 4 shows how the whole thing would look mounted on the tray and suspended upside-down. The reason for mounting it upside-down is to give the cables some space to make a downward bend before they exit the trunk floor near the left rear roll bar mount. The connection between the e-brake cables and the actuator cable coming out of the E-Stopp will be further supported by adding E-Stopps optional support bracket (photo 5).
Electrical setup would be super-easy, as I could run the power and ground feeds for the actuator through the same conduit that will carry the license plate light wires in the RF rear harness.
Any and all thoughts, suggestions and criticisms welcome!
Thanks,
John
https://thefactoryfiveforum.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=128836&d=1590183367
https://thefactoryfiveforum.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=128835&d=1590183220
https://thefactoryfiveforum.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=128833&d=1590183179
https://thefactoryfiveforum.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=128834&d=1590183199
https://thefactoryfiveforum.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=128837&d=1590184686
I know that several folks have installed E-Stopps in their roadsters, but there's not a ton of information out there on how they did it. From what I gather most folks have installed the actuator in the trans tunnel. I've been playing around with that, as well as other ideas, and think I may have come up with something that will work. The basic idea comes from how Revology trunk-mounts the E-Stopp in their Mustangs (photo 1 below). I'm thinking of mounting the E-Stopp across the forward portion of the trunk, just behind the front roll bar mounts. The width is enough to be able to get a 6-7" bend radius in the cable. When the cable and housing is curved like this in the mock-up it seems to still operate perfectly smoothly and without any additional resistance. The second photo shows the basic layout and dimensions of how everything would fit together, except the entire setup would be mounted on a sheetmetal plate upside-down and suspended from the two upper side 3/4' tubes. Image 3 is my (VERY) crude napkin sketch of how the plate would look. It would have folded edges on the long sides to stiffen it and to make a shield of sorts from stuff accidentally getting stuck in the mechanism if you carelessly stuff a jacket in the trunk. Photo 4 shows how the whole thing would look mounted on the tray and suspended upside-down. The reason for mounting it upside-down is to give the cables some space to make a downward bend before they exit the trunk floor near the left rear roll bar mount. The connection between the e-brake cables and the actuator cable coming out of the E-Stopp will be further supported by adding E-Stopps optional support bracket (photo 5).
Electrical setup would be super-easy, as I could run the power and ground feeds for the actuator through the same conduit that will carry the license plate light wires in the RF rear harness.
Any and all thoughts, suggestions and criticisms welcome!
Thanks,
John
https://thefactoryfiveforum.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=128836&d=1590183367
https://thefactoryfiveforum.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=128835&d=1590183220
https://thefactoryfiveforum.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=128833&d=1590183179
https://thefactoryfiveforum.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=128834&d=1590183199
https://thefactoryfiveforum.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=128837&d=1590184686