It's a hobbyist go to solution for anything that needs bonding quickly!
So once I had the components stuck to the cubby I gave it a test. It worked perfectly, charging the phone without being position fussy, just like I wanted.
So once the electronics were sorted, I wanted to be able to see the charging LEDs which are fitted the board. Slightly annoyingly the LEDs are on the wrong side of the board, meaning they would illuminate under the dash. So I came up the a DIY "light pipe" to get round the problem.
I used a clear 5 mm LED, which I cut the lens off of. I drilled a 5 mm hole in the cubby back panel, adjacent to the LEDs on the board into which pushed my LED lens.
I made a sandwich of 0.5 mm clear plastic and some white paper, bridging the LEDs and LED lens light pipe, stuck down with black tape.
This allows the light from the LEDs to shine through the light pipe indirectly, meaning a subtle rather than glaring light.
I then mummified the whole lot in gaffer tape to protect from accidental shorts behind the dash.
The next part of the installation was to provide the Qi charging board with a 5 Volt USB supply. For this I used a 12 Volt to 5 Volt "buck" regulator, which I keep for powering various devices from my workshop solar battery system.
I simply soldered a length of 5 Amp twin core cable to this and wrapped it in tape.
I then connected my Qi board to the USB buck regulator by a short 2 Amp rated USB lead.
The 12 Volts end was connected to the fuse box at the radio feed using a blade breakout connector. The earth was connected to a nearby bolt using a crimp on ring terminal.
The end result is neat and functional and I can tell when the phone is charging by the colour of the light visible at the back of the cubby box.
Red for standby.
Blue for charging.
That's it until the next instalment of "Not your normal Freelander mods".