HeywoodFloyd
Active Member
Hi all,
I can't be the first person to talk about this on here, but it would seem my searching skills are crap as I've not found any threads on this exact subject...
I've got a 1987 90, and I'm having fun bringing it into the modern day, which this week will include adding door lamp switch and central locking.
The central locking I'm fine with, this is not my first rodeo, however I'm trying to work out where to position some door lamp switches? The usual place is to put them on the inner door frame, in the hinged side. But I'm looking at it and scratching my head - there's not much in the way of contact with the door and the frame when the door is shut, most of which is taken up by the seal.
So, rather than working this out for myself - I'm hoping someone has already worked out the best place, and taken some helpful pictures maybe?
Or, is this entirely not the right approach with lamp switches? Do the modern defenders do something else (I'm assuming this was eventually introduced in modern models?), maybe it's part of the latch mechanism in new ones because of the door design? I hope not, as I'd rather not look at replacing latch mechanisms etc, as I have spare central locking bits and door lamp switches to use.
Cheers in advance.
I can't be the first person to talk about this on here, but it would seem my searching skills are crap as I've not found any threads on this exact subject...
I've got a 1987 90, and I'm having fun bringing it into the modern day, which this week will include adding door lamp switch and central locking.
The central locking I'm fine with, this is not my first rodeo, however I'm trying to work out where to position some door lamp switches? The usual place is to put them on the inner door frame, in the hinged side. But I'm looking at it and scratching my head - there's not much in the way of contact with the door and the frame when the door is shut, most of which is taken up by the seal.
So, rather than working this out for myself - I'm hoping someone has already worked out the best place, and taken some helpful pictures maybe?
Or, is this entirely not the right approach with lamp switches? Do the modern defenders do something else (I'm assuming this was eventually introduced in modern models?), maybe it's part of the latch mechanism in new ones because of the door design? I hope not, as I'd rather not look at replacing latch mechanisms etc, as I have spare central locking bits and door lamp switches to use.
Cheers in advance.