Home > Maintenance & Mods (L322) > Retro fitting Paddle Shift to early L322 |
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Baben Member Since: 17 Oct 2010 Location: Kyalami Posts: 165 |
It is an intriguing possibility Allisong. Perhaps one could fuse the heating element inside the wheel so that if it pops it doesn't pop the whole lot - this assumes you replace the original 10A with perhaps a 15A and then fuse at 10A at the heating element. Depends whether the clock spring can handle 15A thru that circuit designed for 10A. I would be surprised if it couldn't. |
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28th Jun 2011 5:05pm |
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pretlove Member Since: 10 Feb 2011 Location: Bas vegas Posts: 1865 |
wireless is good ...........as they say dont fix it if it aint broke...........plus for me i dont have the heating element so couldnt do it that way if i wanted to...........but still if it works for you well done "RANGEISM WILL NOT BE TOLERATED"
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28th Jun 2011 6:12pm |
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robbo770 Member Since: 10 Jan 2010 Location: Aberdeenshire Posts: 467 |
Well I have managed to get the wireless working on my V8, I even remote powered the Transmitter so no worries about battery going flat.
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30th Jun 2011 10:14pm |
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stan Site Moderator Member Since: 13 Jul 2010 Location: a moderate moderated moderator moderating moderately in moderation Posts: 35274 |
lurking on this thread and i have a question, what are you guys going to use the paddles for as the FFRR is an auto and was designed to be driven like one.. |
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1st Jul 2011 8:01am |
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robbo770 Member Since: 10 Jan 2010 Location: Aberdeenshire Posts: 467 |
well scarey, when you have a V8 with 22" rims, the word off roader, become road killer, as mine loves a roasting along any road and the paddle shift makes this even more fun to do, so this should even on a Td6 make the driving experience a exciting occurance!!! no its not a new 5 litre SC but that no reason why it can't be one almost... Current vehicles 4.2 SC FFRR RSE 2010- facelift Range Rover Evogue Dynamic Lux Gone Rejected RRS my14.5 nightmare Disco B4 XXV convert Freelander 06 SE 06 RFFRR 4.2 SC Vogue RSE Audi A8 4.2Tdi Quattro (hated with a vengence!!) 54 FFRR 2005 model V8 4.4 Cobra Variant 53 Mitsubishi Shogun V6 |
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1st Jul 2011 8:07am |
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stan Site Moderator Member Since: 13 Jul 2010 Location: a moderate moderated moderator moderating moderately in moderation Posts: 35274 |
understood , but isnt there a manual mode on the gear stick for that.. |
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1st Jul 2011 8:14am |
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mattstevenson2005 Member Since: 01 Jan 2011 Location: Manchester, UK Posts: 737 |
yer but the gearshift is stupid in manual mode its too far over to be of any use lol |
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1st Jul 2011 6:38pm |
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pretlove Member Since: 10 Feb 2011 Location: Bas vegas Posts: 1865 |
thats true it is to far over......also what can i say boys and there toys
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1st Jul 2011 6:40pm |
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allisong Member Since: 28 Jun 2011 Location: UK Posts: 9 |
All, with respect to using the heated steering wheel supply for all the switches, well yes indeed if the heating element shorts then the 10 Amp fuse blows and all the switches stop working, not that bad, I have a new steering wheel and don't use the heating that often and would not expect the element to blow. I would also expect it to blow "open circuit" not "short circuit" anyhow. If it does short circuit you would simply have to replace the fuse to get the switches working and at a later date you have the issue of having to repair the steering heating element anyhow. (If the element shorts then I would expect the steering heating circuit board would "fry" also looking at the design).
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2nd Jul 2011 5:09am |
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pretlove Member Since: 10 Feb 2011 Location: Bas vegas Posts: 1865 |
well explained geoff
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2nd Jul 2011 9:54am |
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robbo770 Member Since: 10 Jan 2010 Location: Aberdeenshire Posts: 467 |
well here is the detailed photo's of the steering wheel conversion that I did to avoid any battery use , so its ingnition powered via the heate steering wheel circut.
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16th Jul 2011 12:49pm |
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robbo770 Member Since: 10 Jan 2010 Location: Aberdeenshire Posts: 467 |
I am helping a oversea FF member convert his TDV8 3.6
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16th Jul 2011 8:47pm |
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Baben Member Since: 17 Oct 2010 Location: Kyalami Posts: 165 |
Well, in addition to making the on-road use the the vehicle a lot more snappy when pressing on, I use the paddles off-road as well. In thick sand it gives you immediate availability of a lower or higher gear exactly when you need it without waiting for the box to react, ie you don't lose momentum before you grab the lower gear. The gear control in my vehicle has manual, just like most of the newer vehicles have manual shift. We are using the same control but just adding the steering paddles. In the 2010+ it is plug and play - it was designed as an option, just never installed |
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17th Jul 2011 4:43am |
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stan Site Moderator Member Since: 13 Jul 2010 Location: a moderate moderated moderator moderating moderately in moderation Posts: 35274 |
i like to stick the lever in 'd' and drive...if i want to mess about with gearing , i would have got one of those 'manual' cars i keep hearing about.. |
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17th Jul 2011 8:59am |
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