It took a LOT of work and patience - but the end result is pretty cool. The pictures are sorta self-explanatory.
You NEED a really good variable temperature soldering iron for this project - ask me why if you really need to.
Basically, I desoldered the front control board from a Cobra 19-DXIII CB radio and relocated the channel, signal strength, and TX indicators to the little dead spot in the speedo cluster where the automatic trucks have the shift indicator. As you can see, I used the little filler piece that just sits in there on the manual transmission trucks. By using a round "ribbon cable" originally designed for a computer floppy drive... I was able to relocate the front control board and end up with a tight pack of small wires that are easier to fish around the dash.
I lengthened the leads for the channel control, volume/power and squelch knobs (along with the mic jack... ) and fitted them into the dash bezel - sorry I don't have a pic for that yet. The whole install is completely stealth.
LOTS of hot glue was used after everything was soldered up and tested... it's cheap and semi-permanent.
The rest of the original CB radio is stuffed behind the HVAC controls. My only complaint is low audio output... I already have a plan to rectify that situation.
I got the idea from a guy that put his Blue Chip FMS display in the same area and figured I'd do something like that with a CB radio.
Here's the mainboard on the CB where the front control board used to be soldered - LOTS of hot glue here:
#ad
This is the backside of the front control board - LOTS of hot glue here too:
#ad
Here's the finished/modified filler panel:
#ad
This is what it looks like sitting in the speedo cluster:
#ad
And a closeup of the finished product:
#ad
Sorry for the blurry/crappy shots - they were originally 640x480 cellphone pics.
Matt
You NEED a really good variable temperature soldering iron for this project - ask me why if you really need to.
Basically, I desoldered the front control board from a Cobra 19-DXIII CB radio and relocated the channel, signal strength, and TX indicators to the little dead spot in the speedo cluster where the automatic trucks have the shift indicator. As you can see, I used the little filler piece that just sits in there on the manual transmission trucks. By using a round "ribbon cable" originally designed for a computer floppy drive... I was able to relocate the front control board and end up with a tight pack of small wires that are easier to fish around the dash.
I lengthened the leads for the channel control, volume/power and squelch knobs (along with the mic jack... ) and fitted them into the dash bezel - sorry I don't have a pic for that yet. The whole install is completely stealth.
LOTS of hot glue was used after everything was soldered up and tested... it's cheap and semi-permanent.
The rest of the original CB radio is stuffed behind the HVAC controls. My only complaint is low audio output... I already have a plan to rectify that situation.
I got the idea from a guy that put his Blue Chip FMS display in the same area and figured I'd do something like that with a CB radio.
Here's the mainboard on the CB where the front control board used to be soldered - LOTS of hot glue here:
This is the backside of the front control board - LOTS of hot glue here too:
Here's the finished/modified filler panel:
This is what it looks like sitting in the speedo cluster:
And a closeup of the finished product:
Sorry for the blurry/crappy shots - they were originally 640x480 cellphone pics.

Matt
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