I want to not have to remove my light board every time I launch and recover my speedboat. I see several light boards that claim they are submersible. Anyone have any recommendations or experience of this
Regards
Dennis
by Bigplumbs » 08 Aug 2016, 08:04

by betty boop » 08 Aug 2016, 12:27

by Bigplumbs » 08 Aug 2016, 20:54
ChrisH wrote:I can't even get led lights to work on my Mercedes. Bought the light board but seems the onboard computer can't recognise them.
Wrap lots of clingfilm around them
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by ChrisH » 08 Aug 2016, 21:32
Bigplumbs wrote:ChrisH wrote:I can't even get led lights to work on my Mercedes. Bought the light board but seems the onboard computer can't recognise them.
Wrap lots of clingfilm around them
Sent from my SM-G900F using Tapatalk
It said that on the add for the lights wont work with modern cars.................................... What is happening with the world. Who ever thought we needed an on board computer connected to lights on a car. We used to be happy with just a switch.
Terminator and the rise of the machines is not far away.... Them luddites had a point I recon
Dennis

by argonaut » 09 Aug 2016, 09:51

by betty boop » 09 Aug 2016, 12:36
argonaut wrote:Most modern cars have the canbus wiring system .... and you can't just connect in with scotch lock connectors as in years gone by.
Manufacturers pace a pre-wired socket in the rear and you need an interface unit to plug in ........... this is particularly likley if your car has LED lighting.
In fact connecting in without the interface invalidates the warranty on your car.
On submersible lighting - the US have done this for years, have had a couple of trailers with lights built in .... LED waterproof lights are mainly rated for rainfall ..
For example IP54 gives rating against dust ingress and water splash form any direction. (rain)
For any submersion you need IP67 (up to 1m) and IP68 for more than 1m
I seriously doubt you will find trailer lights have an IP68 rating in a price range you want to pay.
Then the real issue is that most LED clusters come with a pig tail of flex .... they do this as sealing flex to fitting is under their control, where & how do you joint these together .... the manufacturer expects they will be joined in a dry area (in the boot)
You would have to end up with multiple joints ... and have them fully waterproof - every joint is a possible cause of failure.
I looked into doing this ... but decided a removable board while a pain .. is still best option - esp for me in salt water.

by Bigplumbs » 09 Aug 2016, 16:40
argonaut wrote:Most modern cars have the canbus wiring system .... and you can't just connect in with scotch lock connectors as in years gone by.
Manufacturers pace a pre-wired socket in the rear and you need an interface unit to plug in ........... this is particularly likley if your car has LED lighting.
In fact connecting in without the interface invalidates the warranty on your car.
On submersible lighting - the US have done this for years, have had a couple of trailers with lights built in .... LED waterproof lights are mainly rated for rainfall ..
For example IP54 gives rating against dust ingress and water splash form any direction. (rain)
For any submersion you need IP67 (up to 1m) and IP68 for more than 1m
I seriously doubt you will find trailer lights have an IP68 rating in a price range you want to pay.
Then the real issue is that most LED clusters come with a pig tail of flex .... they do this as sealing flex to fitting is under their control, where & how do you joint these together .... the manufacturer expects they will be joined in a dry area (in the boot)
You would have to end up with multiple joints ... and have them fully waterproof - every joint is a possible cause of failure.
I looked into doing this ... but decided a removable board while a pain .. is still best option - esp for me in salt water.

by Ianfs » 09 Aug 2016, 21:51