chaosmarine92
Well-known member
- First Name
- David
- Joined
- Feb 27, 2024
- Threads
- 10
- Messages
- 209
- Reaction score
- 313
- Location
- Knoxville, TN
- Vehicles
- cybertruck
- Thread starter
- #1
I just finished installing a ham radio for the 2m/70cm bands. Here is the finished product first.
Now starting from the back, I have a comet SS-460SB antenna. It is 18 inches tall which leaves me about 3 inches of clearance going through the garage door. The antenna is mounted on a mohawk designs 3/4" cybertruck bracket. The cable is a 16'9" comet 3D5M UHF cable that I pushed into the gap between the cantrail and the body, then came over the rail and with 2 pieces of duck tape kept it out of the way of the door. I just let the cable be squished into the weather seal on the door at the bottom which hasn't harmed it then ran under the floor mat up to the drivers seat.
Under the driver seat I put the radio transceiver (Yaesu FTM-150RASP) and a 13.8v 30A dc power supply (Jesverty sps-1330). The transceiver came with a bracket that I screwed into a wood board cut to fit under the seat and the power supply just has a screw at the front and back that are sticking up to keep it from sliding. The power cable for the power supply then goes back along the seat and plugs into the 120v outlet under the rear screen. From the radio I ran a 7ft ethernet cable to the front head unit tucking it under the floor mat and coming out at the mats highest point. I just used a bit of tape to keep the cable out of the way.
To mount the head unit I made a wooden rectagle out of 4 bits of wood screwed together, painted black, and with felt stapled to the surfaces that touch the truck. Measurements were just cutting sticks that were a little to long then holding them in place to mark where to cut it to size. I also added ~1" cube blocks on the back to keep the cradle from swinging. I just pushed the blocks into where I needed them then stapled them to the cradle.
The bottom stick of the cradle has 4 holes drilled in it. 2 small ones for the mic mount screws, a 1/2" hole to pass the ethernet cable through, and a 1/4" for the mounting screw. The mounting screw wasnt long enough to go all the way through the cradle so I drilled a 1/2" hole halfway through from the backside to let it stick out.
Total cost was about $600 with most of that being the radio itself. Let me know if you have question!
Here's the rest of the pictures.
Now starting from the back, I have a comet SS-460SB antenna. It is 18 inches tall which leaves me about 3 inches of clearance going through the garage door. The antenna is mounted on a mohawk designs 3/4" cybertruck bracket. The cable is a 16'9" comet 3D5M UHF cable that I pushed into the gap between the cantrail and the body, then came over the rail and with 2 pieces of duck tape kept it out of the way of the door. I just let the cable be squished into the weather seal on the door at the bottom which hasn't harmed it then ran under the floor mat up to the drivers seat.
Under the driver seat I put the radio transceiver (Yaesu FTM-150RASP) and a 13.8v 30A dc power supply (Jesverty sps-1330). The transceiver came with a bracket that I screwed into a wood board cut to fit under the seat and the power supply just has a screw at the front and back that are sticking up to keep it from sliding. The power cable for the power supply then goes back along the seat and plugs into the 120v outlet under the rear screen. From the radio I ran a 7ft ethernet cable to the front head unit tucking it under the floor mat and coming out at the mats highest point. I just used a bit of tape to keep the cable out of the way.
To mount the head unit I made a wooden rectagle out of 4 bits of wood screwed together, painted black, and with felt stapled to the surfaces that touch the truck. Measurements were just cutting sticks that were a little to long then holding them in place to mark where to cut it to size. I also added ~1" cube blocks on the back to keep the cradle from swinging. I just pushed the blocks into where I needed them then stapled them to the cradle.
The bottom stick of the cradle has 4 holes drilled in it. 2 small ones for the mic mount screws, a 1/2" hole to pass the ethernet cable through, and a 1/4" for the mounting screw. The mounting screw wasnt long enough to go all the way through the cradle so I drilled a 1/2" hole halfway through from the backside to let it stick out.
Total cost was about $600 with most of that being the radio itself. Let me know if you have question!
Here's the rest of the pictures.
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