Hi - if anyone currently has a bare internal van (preferably barn door) mid conversion and could help verify a couple of things for me that would be much appreciated. Through images if at all possible. Vid clip as a bonus!
I have a fully converted and carpeted van (one piece, so no easily removable ply panels) and I’m trying to investigate cable routes for a rear camera. I’ve searched and read most d/pillar references in the forum on cameras and I’m happy it can be done. Threads on barn door to tailgate conversion also helpful when showing images of the area I’m interested in. But now to actually do it.
I have used an endoscope and pull rods but struggling to understand the skins around the top of the d pillar to find a route up from rear N/S light cluster to the top of the roof and along to B pillar. Getting from B-pillar to rear of vehicle I’m happy with. I’m doing it all by feel and dodgy endoscope footage - I feel like a surgeon doing keyhole surgery. Badly!
Before I start peeling/cutting into my carpet unnecessarily, I want to understand the three holes at the back of the rear quarter panel/window frame - if they can help me fish a cable down from roof and then redirect a cable down the D pillar. Does the void connect? Or are they separate skins? Or is the only option trying to remove the boxing at the rear of the van under the pop top (I have no high level cupboards there).
I’ve removed a rubber grommet for the unused tailgate electrics and can see its daylight outline when I push the endoscope from the interior light over the sliding door so I’ve got quite close. But can’t find the top of the d pillar void, and easily control a pull rod from 2m away at the interior light hole.
I can feel that the converter has bodged the carpet and not taped over or sealed holes in the panels and pillars so these may actually help me with this task if I cut into them - but don’t want to do that if they are a dead end.
If I can get a line with my rods and fish wire in stages from rear light to the B pillar through these holes then I can then commit to buying the camera kit knowing I can safely DIY it.
Sorry - probably too much detail here - happy to cover this with anyone happy to put their hand up!
Thanks in advance.
I have a fully converted and carpeted van (one piece, so no easily removable ply panels) and I’m trying to investigate cable routes for a rear camera. I’ve searched and read most d/pillar references in the forum on cameras and I’m happy it can be done. Threads on barn door to tailgate conversion also helpful when showing images of the area I’m interested in. But now to actually do it.
I have used an endoscope and pull rods but struggling to understand the skins around the top of the d pillar to find a route up from rear N/S light cluster to the top of the roof and along to B pillar. Getting from B-pillar to rear of vehicle I’m happy with. I’m doing it all by feel and dodgy endoscope footage - I feel like a surgeon doing keyhole surgery. Badly!
Before I start peeling/cutting into my carpet unnecessarily, I want to understand the three holes at the back of the rear quarter panel/window frame - if they can help me fish a cable down from roof and then redirect a cable down the D pillar. Does the void connect? Or are they separate skins? Or is the only option trying to remove the boxing at the rear of the van under the pop top (I have no high level cupboards there).
I’ve removed a rubber grommet for the unused tailgate electrics and can see its daylight outline when I push the endoscope from the interior light over the sliding door so I’ve got quite close. But can’t find the top of the d pillar void, and easily control a pull rod from 2m away at the interior light hole.
I can feel that the converter has bodged the carpet and not taped over or sealed holes in the panels and pillars so these may actually help me with this task if I cut into them - but don’t want to do that if they are a dead end.
If I can get a line with my rods and fish wire in stages from rear light to the B pillar through these holes then I can then commit to buying the camera kit knowing I can safely DIY it.
Sorry - probably too much detail here - happy to cover this with anyone happy to put their hand up!
Thanks in advance.
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