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www.ColoradoClassicBroncos.com - View topic - Digger's '69 Build Thread
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 Digger's '69 Build Thread 
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Post Digger's '69 Build Thread
ETA: Thread re-named. No longer a "New Member"
ETA#2: Added Table to Contents. (This thread is getting long and I keep referencing it in other threads)

Page 1: Introduction, wiring, accessory control panel
Page 2: Wiring, accessory control panel, dash, front axle gearing
Page 3: Front suspension, rear suspension
Page 4: Rear suspension, CAD work
Page 5: CAD work, rear suspension
Page 6: Fuel system, brake lines, front suspension (shocks / air bumps), exhaust, driveshafts, first drive
Page 7: Hitch, mirrors, roll cage, rear bumper, rear storage, tires
Page 8: EFI components, swing out tire carrier
Page 9: Wiper upgrade, camshaft swap, hydro-boost, EFI
Page 10: Transmission teardown, clutch hydraulic adapter, sway bar, injector swap, roll cage padding, trailer brake controller, 36-1 crank trigger, steering wheel upgrade, R2.8 Cummins swap (intro)
Page 11: Pulling 351W V8, Cummins-ZF5 adapter design / manufacture
Page 12: Diesel gauges, Cummins-ZF5 adapter machining and install, engine mounts, engine fitup
Page 13: R2.8 SEMA pictures, fuel tank mods, intercooler selection and install, hood mods, radiator install, brake and fuel plumbing
Page 14: Brake and fuel plumbing (cont.), intercooler plumbing, coolant plumbing, air filter assembly, exhaust, remote oil filter, frame mods, engine bay paint,
Page 15: Steering column, steering gear repair, engine mods, air inlet plumbing, power steering plumbing, wiring
Page 16: LED headlights, more wiring, R2.8 first start,



Hey all, I discovered this forum after making my recent purchase. I wanted to introduce myself and get a build thread going. Here is what I'm starting with:

1969 Bronco

- 351W Crate engine, forged pistons/rods, roller cam/rockers, alum heads/intake, SS valves, 650 Holley, headers, MSD distro/ignition/coil
- NP435/Dana 20, 9 inch 31 spline Currie axle ARB - Dana44 w/ ARB, 35" BFG KM2s
- Aftermarket bucket seats, Autometer gauges, Rampage softtop

I already picked up a ZF-5 and 6:1 Atlas T-case to drop in. I also have a full width HP Dana44 lined up that needs gears and a full width BB 9inch to drop in the rear. Both with ARBs and 4.56 gears.

Image
Image


Looking forward to getting to know everyone!

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Cummins R2.8 diesel, ZF5, AtlasII, HP44/BB9, ARBs, coiled / linked suspension, 37" KO2s, full cage, bumpers, etc.
Build Thread:

Average 23.5 mpg, Best tank: 25.1 mpg


Last edited by Digger on Sat Sep 25, 2021 9:06 pm, edited 15 times in total.



Mon Jul 29, 2013 9:21 pm
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Post Re: New Member 69
Welcome. Where you located. I may be interested in both axles if you're looking to sell once your upgraded. I've got a 69 with stock axles that are in need of an upgrade.

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69 Wagon, 351W, Explorer EFI & Serpentine, ZF5, 35" tires, 3.5 SL, 2 BL, WARN 8274


Mon Jul 29, 2013 9:53 pm
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Post Re: New Member 69
Nice. I love my full width axles, great on the highway & off road. I've got my ZF, and am going to order an Atlas. I was going to try to do it this summer, but I think its going to be next year now. House remodel must get finished.

Keep posting up as you install all that cool stuff.

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"America is at that awkward stage. It's too late to work within the system, but too early to shoot the bastards." – Claire Wolfe
74-AWB 98", ZF5, Atlas4, TGW HP1060 and HP1014 axles, ARBs, 37's, 3.5" lift-5.5" front coil springs, Tahoe rear springs, EFI 302, h-boost, York OBA, 4x4x2, custom dash & gauges
72 U15- Explorer Sport-Candyapple Red (1 of 141)


Mon Jul 29, 2013 10:25 pm
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Post Re: New Member 69
Welcome, sounds like a rig that wants to be wheeled. Nice plan on the upgrades, it'll only make it better.

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Best to Date MPG: 26.6


Mon Jul 29, 2013 11:24 pm
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Post Re: New Member 69
Nice ride for sure! Welcome to the club!

Is the new D44 a High Pinion?

Looks like you need a nice exhaust ring and bring your exhaust out that hole.... :)

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1973 Bronco, 351 SEFI, Locked, discs, 35's ZF-5spd and Atlas 4spd. 235:1 Crawl Ratio. It may be ugly, but it's slow.
http://www.ucora.org


Tue Jul 30, 2013 12:12 pm
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Post Re: New Member 69
Sweet rig! Welcome!


Tue Jul 30, 2013 1:58 pm
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Post Re: New Member 69

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Cummins R2.8 diesel, ZF5, AtlasII, HP44/BB9, ARBs, coiled / linked suspension, 37" KO2s, full cage, bumpers, etc.
Build Thread:

Average 23.5 mpg, Best tank: 25.1 mpg


Wed Jul 31, 2013 9:37 pm
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Cummins R2.8 diesel, ZF5, AtlasII, HP44/BB9, ARBs, coiled / linked suspension, 37" KO2s, full cage, bumpers, etc.
Build Thread:

Average 23.5 mpg, Best tank: 25.1 mpg


Wed Jul 31, 2013 9:43 pm
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Post Re: New Member 69
Well it's been a while, might be time for an update. I wish I had more to show for my efforts on the Bronco, but it has been lots of number-crunching, parts pulling, parts buying, and CAD work to get ready for what's to come.

This truck is as "clean-slate" as I can get, so I decided to master plan the whole project before picking up a wrench. The single biggest project is the suspension. Since I'll be touching everything underneath, I will be factoring in things like proper ride and roll rates, frequency split, proper overall understeer geometry and in general, giving this thing the full OEM suspension tune. I'm even going to leverage some resources to custom tune some Bilstein shocks to my exact application. smokin (But more on that later)

First off, I laid out the master plan on my white board:
Image




To get going on the suspension design, I first stopped in to Brucker Bros in Longmont to get the truck weighed and Aaron worked with me to pull off an inclined weigh, so I could get CG location in 3-dimensional space.
Image


Then I drew out the stock geometry and overlaid a few ideas on where the links would package in and what kind of numbers I would get back. I decided to build a 3-link with torque arm in the rear, but it was a little tricky to stuff it all in there without getting stupid anti-squat numbers and bad roll axis geometry.
Image
Image


It's still not final yet, but I'm getting there. Since part of this truck's dual-sport nature will be to handle both crawling and high-speed, I'm adding compact jounce shocks on all four corners, which is adding to the packaging headaches.

_________________
Cummins R2.8 diesel, ZF5, AtlasII, HP44/BB9, ARBs, coiled / linked suspension, 37" KO2s, full cage, bumpers, etc.
Build Thread:

Average 23.5 mpg, Best tank: 25.1 mpg


Last edited by Digger on Tue Dec 18, 2018 10:00 pm, edited 3 times in total.



Tue Mar 04, 2014 11:19 pm
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Post Re: New Member 69
Armed with current corner weights, I started adding up all the additional weight the truck will be taking on and then started calculating ride rates. Part of that process is tuning the rear to "catch up" to the front after hitting a bump at high speed to minimize pitching and passenger discomfort. This was a little new to me, so a worked up an Excel sheet to help visualize changes in front and rear spring rates.
The brown lines represent the bump in the road and blue lines are the relative displacement of the front and rear suspension. As you can see, the rear catches the front within 1 cycle, which is pretty good. After that, damping should equalize the front and rear.
Image


After that, I decided to get out of the house and visit a friend who has been rebuilding his Bronco for a number of years now. What started out as fixing a rear axle bearing has turned into a frame off resto
Image


But I came home with a new front axle and it cleaned up nice
Image


While I was at it, I decided to clean the 80,000 miles of grime off my Atlas that I pulled from my Ranger
Image
Image
Image

_________________
Cummins R2.8 diesel, ZF5, AtlasII, HP44/BB9, ARBs, coiled / linked suspension, 37" KO2s, full cage, bumpers, etc.
Build Thread:

Average 23.5 mpg, Best tank: 25.1 mpg


Last edited by Digger on Tue Dec 18, 2018 10:06 pm, edited 1 time in total.



Tue Mar 04, 2014 11:32 pm
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Post Re: New Member 69
After an afternoon of scrubbing grime with a toothbrush, we made a Friday night Sonic run, which has been a family tradition since my wife and I were dating. But this time we got to take two cars!
by , on Flickr



With the Atlas cleaned up, I refit the input and rear output to work with the ZF-5 and the Bronco's CV1310 rear driveshaft
by , on Flickr
by , on Flickr

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Cummins R2.8 diesel, ZF5, AtlasII, HP44/BB9, ARBs, coiled / linked suspension, 37" KO2s, full cage, bumpers, etc.
Build Thread:

Average 23.5 mpg, Best tank: 25.1 mpg


Last edited by Digger on Tue Dec 18, 2018 10:09 pm, edited 1 time in total.



Tue Mar 04, 2014 11:47 pm
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Post Re: New Member 69
I pulled the axles from the Ranger before hauling it off, so I have a nice axle collection now.
Image



With some patience, I scored a low $$, zero-mile rebuilt ZF-5 (S5-42) from a shop owner that retired and was selling everything.
Image



With Bronco Graveyard having 10% off everything in December, I went on a bit of a buying spree. First thing on New Year's Day, I was installing power brakes
Image


While I waited for my back-ordered gauges to arrive, I did some preliminary CAD and FEA work.
Image
Image


The cage will be frame-tied, but isolated by rubber bushings. This will allow it to tie to the body for additional support, while at the same time, stiffen the body. It's far from done, but it's getting there.

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Cummins R2.8 diesel, ZF5, AtlasII, HP44/BB9, ARBs, coiled / linked suspension, 37" KO2s, full cage, bumpers, etc.
Build Thread:

Average 23.5 mpg, Best tank: 25.1 mpg


Last edited by Digger on Tue Dec 18, 2018 10:22 pm, edited 2 times in total.



Tue Mar 04, 2014 11:58 pm
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Post Re: New Member 69
One known problem with the truck when I bought it was a weeping steering box. I figured out from the POs paperwork that it was a quick ratio aftermarket box, but info was lacking on how to get new seals. A few pics and some internet research revealed I had a Delphi 600-series steer box. (The Saginaw pump was an easy spot) A little more research nailed down the original rebuilder that sold the kit to James Duff, but it wasn't clear what the stock application was. After a phone call and some more research, it seems to be clear this box started out life on a Nissan Xterra, but has internals from a Jeep WJ.
Image

I've pulled the WJ box from U-Pull-n-Pay and when I get my hands on the Xterra box, I will try to build a functional replica. Cross your fingers.



At the end of Feb, my gauges finally showed up. It ended up being cheaper to buy the Dakota Digital gauges than purchase the last two missing Autometers to match what the Bronco came with. I'm much more happy with the DD gauges. The look will be much cleaner and more true to the restomod theme.
Image

_________________
Cummins R2.8 diesel, ZF5, AtlasII, HP44/BB9, ARBs, coiled / linked suspension, 37" KO2s, full cage, bumpers, etc.
Build Thread:

Average 23.5 mpg, Best tank: 25.1 mpg


Last edited by Digger on Tue Dec 18, 2018 10:19 pm, edited 1 time in total.



Wed Mar 05, 2014 12:11 am
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Post Re: New Member 69
Since I now have the last piece to redo the dash, I needed to get cracking on the switch panel to match the DD gauges. I went through about 14 CAD variations before I got fed up and put cutter to aluminum and came up with something I liked.
Image



Then I spent an evening designing icons in MSpaint and printed off a few sets at the local Kinkos
Image



After that, I was able to assemble a prototype with the buttons I picked out to match the knobs in the truck.
Image



I went back to CAD and modeled a new panel based on the one I prototyped. It will include a cigarette lighter outlet and dual powerpole connectors.
Image



Last Sunday I was able to machine out the new panel. I took a while on the manual mill and I almost wrecked the whole thing, but I got it done and threw the buttons and indicators in to see how it looked.
Image
Image



I'm pretty happy with the way it turned out, but it still needs paint and the back end electronics. The switch panel will have a microcontroller to read the states of the switches and it will send that information over just two wires to a relay board that will handle all the high-amp switching.
Image


This will simplify the wiring and keep the underhood clean.


That is as far as I've gotten, but it's getting there. I'll post up more as I get stuff done.

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Cummins R2.8 diesel, ZF5, AtlasII, HP44/BB9, ARBs, coiled / linked suspension, 37" KO2s, full cage, bumpers, etc.
Build Thread:

Average 23.5 mpg, Best tank: 25.1 mpg


Last edited by Digger on Tue Dec 18, 2018 10:28 pm, edited 1 time in total.



Wed Mar 05, 2014 12:21 am
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Post Re: New Member 69
One question. Which engineering field is your degree in?

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Stroppe'd
1972 Sport, 302, 3 speed with old school Duff floor shifter, T shift Dana 20 with JB Fab twin stick, 4.11 gears with Trac-loc, Lincoln hydroboost, Chevy disc conversion, WH gas lift gate shock kit, 33" Duratrac tires on slots and about 2.5" of lift, Stroppe installed: bumper braces, dual shocks on all four corners, GM power steering, trans cooler mount, auto shift column, rollbar.

The Terrible One
1972 Sport uncut, 302, C4 with 1974 column , T shift Dana 20, 3.50 gears w/ limited slip, 1966 U13 Roadster kick panel, and factory power steering.

1973 Stroppe Baja project


Wed Mar 05, 2014 12:32 am
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Post Re: New Member 69
And will you rent out your brain?


Wed Mar 05, 2014 1:10 am
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Post Re: New Member 69
Yeah, this is an amazing feat! You got some SW skills! Can't wait to see you start assembly! You doing to make an exploded view?

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1973 Bronco, 351 SEFI, Locked, discs, 35's ZF-5spd and Atlas 4spd. 235:1 Crawl Ratio. It may be ugly, but it's slow.
http://www.ucora.org


Wed Mar 05, 2014 1:47 am
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Cummins R2.8 diesel, ZF5, AtlasII, HP44/BB9, ARBs, coiled / linked suspension, 37" KO2s, full cage, bumpers, etc.
Build Thread:

Average 23.5 mpg, Best tank: 25.1 mpg


Wed Mar 05, 2014 1:14 pm
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Post Re: New Member 69
WELL IT'S OFFICIAL

I finally put the pencil down and started turning wrenches yesterday. With the kids out of town and two days off work I was able to get some serious work done.

First on the list was to pull the old transmission and t-case. They both work fine, but I want overdrive and I already had the Atlas from my Ranger.

A little side-by-side comparision
Image
Image

The long tube headers interfered with the trans coming out and made it a bit of a PITA. I'm still not sure if I will keep them or swap them for shorty's. The new package will be ~ 8" longer and will definitely require driveshaft and exhaust mods along with a new crossmember. Everything is on the floor for now while I figure out the clutch MC and that got pushed behind the rewire project.

To make room for the clutch MC I pulled the dash apart. I have been dreading this because I knew there was a rat's nest of wire hiding back there. The truck came with a Centech harness, but I feared what the PO had done during the install. It turned out to be much worse than I thought.

This was as far as I could get the dash pulled out.Image

I finally got it pulled out enough to see what was going on
Image


My fear of taking this truck 4-wheeling without looking at the wiring was WELL FOUNDED! I found exposed wires where the wire nuts had fallen off, TONS of fuses and relays buried in the harness itself. If anything had gone wrong on the trail, it would have been hours disassembling and searching the harness for the problem.

This is the harness after 10 hours of cutting and disassembling. I have about 6 hours alone in carefully removing the 30 MILES of electrical tape wrapped around everything.
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I removed all the cab switches for the ARB's, compressor, fuel pump, engine fan, backup lights (yes the backup lights were on a switch instead of wired to the trans) and some misc crappy radio wiring.

Back up light will be moved to the transmission, fuel pump and engine fan will move to a factory Ford power distribution block under the hood. ARBs compressor, light bar etc will also move under the hood via my homebrewed relay block. The end result will be about 1/2 the wiring removed from behind the dash, with short, tiddy runs under the hood, thanks to the switch panel and the Dakota Digital gauges.

While I was at, I got more done on the switch panel. Cig outlet and PowerPole plugs came in and were installed after paint. Back lights were installed along with back-end electronics. Code has been written and proved out.
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Bracket for electronics with clearance cut for wires
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Here is a pic of the setup with relay block sitting in their EMI and water proof aluminum housing.
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Cummins R2.8 diesel, ZF5, AtlasII, HP44/BB9, ARBs, coiled / linked suspension, 37" KO2s, full cage, bumpers, etc.
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Average 23.5 mpg, Best tank: 25.1 mpg


Last edited by Digger on Tue Dec 18, 2018 10:40 pm, edited 1 time in total.



Tue Mar 25, 2014 10:18 pm
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Post Re: New Member 69
Love all your planned upgrades, you're going to love the 5 speed and I'm only a tiny bit jealous of the Atlas. Your switch panel is awesome, I know your going to get a bunch of local folks drooling. If you need a hand with any of the big pieces just ask.

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Wed Mar 26, 2014 6:14 am
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Post Re: New Member 69
Awesome stuff. I'll be watching this.

The switch panel is super cool. What is the 4 wire outlet just below the cig lighter?

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"America is at that awkward stage. It's too late to work within the system, but too early to shoot the bastards." – Claire Wolfe
74-AWB 98", ZF5, Atlas4, TGW HP1060 and HP1014 axles, ARBs, 37's, 3.5" lift-5.5" front coil springs, Tahoe rear springs, EFI 302, h-boost, York OBA, 4x4x2, custom dash & gauges
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Wed Mar 26, 2014 7:00 am
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Post Re: New Member 69
looks like you have some great plans

subscribed

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Wed Mar 26, 2014 7:11 am
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Cummins R2.8 diesel, ZF5, AtlasII, HP44/BB9, ARBs, coiled / linked suspension, 37" KO2s, full cage, bumpers, etc.
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Average 23.5 mpg, Best tank: 25.1 mpg


Wed Mar 26, 2014 1:02 pm
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Cummins R2.8 diesel, ZF5, AtlasII, HP44/BB9, ARBs, coiled / linked suspension, 37" KO2s, full cage, bumpers, etc.
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Average 23.5 mpg, Best tank: 25.1 mpg


Wed Mar 26, 2014 1:09 pm
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Post Re: New Member 69
Cool, I've only seen the big versions.

Thanks

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"America is at that awkward stage. It's too late to work within the system, but too early to shoot the bastards." – Claire Wolfe
74-AWB 98", ZF5, Atlas4, TGW HP1060 and HP1014 axles, ARBs, 37's, 3.5" lift-5.5" front coil springs, Tahoe rear springs, EFI 302, h-boost, York OBA, 4x4x2, custom dash & gauges
72 U15- Explorer Sport-Candyapple Red (1 of 141)


Wed Mar 26, 2014 5:18 pm
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Post Re: New Member 69
Those are cool, I was just thinking of picking up the big brother for my receiver winch setup I'm building for my trailer.

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Wed Mar 26, 2014 7:56 pm
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Post New Member 69
I would love to know more about the two wire relay switches. I want to put most of my switches up into the spreader bars between the seats in the cage. This would be perfect so I don't have to run 40 wires up there. You have any links to read about it?

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Wed Mar 26, 2014 9:37 pm
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Post Re: New Member 69
I don't have any writeup yet. I'll do that when it's all finished.

Here is a quick flow chart of how it works
Image

I used a pair of Atmel ATMega328 microcontrollers to run the show. They are very popular due to the widespread use of the Arduino IDE. () I've built a stand-alone board for the uC since it is a waste to use the Arduino development board in a permanent project.

The microcontroller on the switch side does a quick read of the state of all 8 switches to determine if they're ON or OFF. It then encodes this information as a single byte of data, which works out well since a byte is 8 bits. It then sends this byte out the serial port which is connected to the RS-485 IC. That chip translates the TTL signal () to a differential signal to make it noise immune and able to travel long distances in electrically noisy environments like a car.

On the other end, the 2nd RS-485 chip translates the signal back to TTL logic. The 2nd microcontroller reads the single byte of data and decodes it, then turns ON or OFF the appropriate relays. All this happens 50 times/second. It could do it much faster, but they is not much need to do so. No human could toggle a switch that fast. When you flip a switch, the relay turns ON/OFF instantly. It's very seamless and the user could never tell the difference between this system and one that was hard-wired.

The only reason to go to this much effort is to simplify the wiring between the two ends. Theoretically there is no limit to the number of relays that can be controlled over 2 wires. The practical limitation is how many pins the microcontroller has available, but with some clever programming, even this is not much of an obstacle. The bottom line is, if you need to have 30-40 switches, you could do it.

The other advantage is that not all the relays have to be in the same spot. RS-485 is "mulit-drop" capable, so there could be 2 or more relay blocks in different areas of the truck and they can all talk through the same 2 wires. New cars used this same idea, but do it with a CAN-bus. It's similar to RS-485, but more complicated to handle all the things a new car must do. RS-485 is much easier and cheaper to implement.

Here is a commercial unit that functions in a similar way.


Mine is a little more simple. It doesn't require special cables and the wire run could be up to a 4000 ft long without signal desegregation. It is also much, much cheaper. The microcontrollers and RS-485 chips can be purchased for a few dollars a piece, the programming software is free, the relay block was $16 from Amazon and it is well built. Switches were the most expensive part at $5/each. I also had waaayyy too much time in the machined panel and indicators, but obviously those are not required.

The easy way to get this done would be for you to use an Arduino dev board, they come in different flavors, but the UNO is the most common and is not very big. This will save you some effort rigging up a 5V power supply for the uC. I already wrote the code, so we just have to burn it to the uC.

You will need some soldering skills to tie it together, but I'd be willing to help with the layout. What I really want to get done is design a small PCB with everything on it and send to out to one of the small run board manufacturers. That way I could just sell people the two modules they need for both ends, instead of piecing together all the parts themselves. Then they could pick their own switches and relays.

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Cummins R2.8 diesel, ZF5, AtlasII, HP44/BB9, ARBs, coiled / linked suspension, 37" KO2s, full cage, bumpers, etc.
Build Thread:

Average 23.5 mpg, Best tank: 25.1 mpg


Last edited by Digger on Tue Dec 18, 2018 10:41 pm, edited 1 time in total.



Wed Mar 26, 2014 11:33 pm
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Cummins R2.8 diesel, ZF5, AtlasII, HP44/BB9, ARBs, coiled / linked suspension, 37" KO2s, full cage, bumpers, etc.
Build Thread:

Average 23.5 mpg, Best tank: 25.1 mpg


Wed Mar 26, 2014 11:37 pm
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Post Re: New Member 69
I really like the switch panel looks sweet.

I have a arduino board they are very easy to set up and program. Would be cool to get the wireless add on to control everything with your phone too. Not sure what I am going to do with mine yet though.

Thanks for the weight chart to needed that.

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Thu Mar 27, 2014 11:19 pm
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