3rd brake light Antenna Install
I was way off.
well i hope it works out for you but wd40 don't last long and you put lots of hills and valleys on both sides with your grinder. .001" is alot when it comes to water getting in there. A ground wire to the inside of the chassis would have done just as good, as long as it was an odd multiple wavelength (like 3 feet, or 6 feet).
Or a ground wire from the antenna mount to the tailgate. If your tailgate doesn't have good grounding, it's a pretty simple operation to run a grounding wire to the tub with a wire through the strap at the hinge.
The longer the ground wire the more it effects the ground plane from everything I could read about it. I really don't think it's too big of a deal, guys drill hole to put on adjustable track brackets all the time. the first hole, scratch, ding, dent, wrinkle, grind, is the hardest. I was more worried about cracking the glass on the hardtop after someone mentioned that I removed a little more metal, just to be safe.
I gotta say... I can't believe you took the paint off like that. If it gets any moisture at all, even humidity, it WILL rust. Eventually bare metal, outdoors, WILL rust. I'd paint it over and do something else.
Besides, what you have done is not near as good as a ground to the frame. The door is not a good ground because it relies on conductivity through the hinge, which is a moving part and is often an insufficient ground. I ran a ground wire from my antenna mount through the tailgate (with the coax) to the frame, to make sure it is grounded.
Sorry, dude, but I think you messed up. No offense intended.
Besides, what you have done is not near as good as a ground to the frame. The door is not a good ground because it relies on conductivity through the hinge, which is a moving part and is often an insufficient ground. I ran a ground wire from my antenna mount through the tailgate (with the coax) to the frame, to make sure it is grounded.
Sorry, dude, but I think you messed up. No offense intended.
I gotta say... I can't believe you took the paint off like that. If it gets any moisture at all, even humidity, it WILL rust. Eventually bare metal, outdoors, WILL rust. I'd paint it over and do something else.
Besides, what you have done is not near as good as a ground to the frame. The door is not a good ground because it relies on conductivity through the hinge, which is a moving part and is often an insufficient ground. I ran a ground wire from my antenna mount through the tailgate (with the coax) to the frame, to make sure it is grounded.
Sorry, dude, but I think you messed up. No offense intended.
Besides, what you have done is not near as good as a ground to the frame. The door is not a good ground because it relies on conductivity through the hinge, which is a moving part and is often an insufficient ground. I ran a ground wire from my antenna mount through the tailgate (with the coax) to the frame, to make sure it is grounded.
Sorry, dude, but I think you messed up. No offense intended.
I gotta say... I can't believe you took the paint off like that. If it gets any moisture at all, even humidity, it WILL rust. Eventually bare metal, outdoors, WILL rust. I'd paint it over and do something else.
Besides, what you have done is not near as good as a ground to the frame. The door is not a good ground because it relies on conductivity through the hinge, which is a moving part and is often an insufficient ground. I ran a ground wire from my antenna mount through the tailgate (with the coax) to the frame, to make sure it is grounded.
Sorry, dude, but I think you messed up. No offense intended.
Besides, what you have done is not near as good as a ground to the frame. The door is not a good ground because it relies on conductivity through the hinge, which is a moving part and is often an insufficient ground. I ran a ground wire from my antenna mount through the tailgate (with the coax) to the frame, to make sure it is grounded.
Sorry, dude, but I think you messed up. No offense intended.
But since I had it apart I coated the bare metal on both surfaces with dielectric grease and used permatex (form a gasket sealant #2). So if water thought about working it's way in, which it hasn't, now it has a seal around it to further waterproof it.
On your recommendation I ran a 10 gage stranded ground wire from the door to the Jeep through the existing wire bundle. No difference noticed BUT if I open and close the back gate a 1,000 times I won't have to worry about losing continuity. Before installing the groundwire I ran continuity checks by opening and closing the rear gate and never lost continuity, but an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure on all levels.
Thanks for the inputs
if you live anywhere that salts the roads in winter do not scrape or even drill holes in your carrier. i did and its turned to powder in one winter. i scraped it up and painted it with anti-corrosion stuff but seriously it literally disolves very fast if left unprotected.
neat job anyhow
neat job anyhow
Thanks for the ideas/info



