I spent an hour or so this morning getting the top rack back into the car and re-assembling the brackets and the Zilla and cables. I needed to make sure all the cables are tight and aligned, so this took some time. I also did some more shrink tubing on the cable ends, even though the lugs are hidden in the box.
Later, I snuck out of the block party to do the battery cabling. I was a little concerned about this after my meltdown, so I put on rubber gloves, safety glasses and tightened up one cable at a time being careful that neither end was touching anything other than the battery post where it belonged. I taped up my ½ inch open end wrench so that only the open end section was exposed to insulate it in case I dropped it. I had the circuit breaker switched off and triple checked the Zilla and contactor wiring to make sure there were no shorts in the cabling. This was nerve racking work, but I got through all three racks without incident. After a sigh of relief I sat behind the wheel and turned the key. I don’t have the instruments installed, so all I could do was listen to the contactor close to indicate the car was working. I gave it a little juice and it moved! The Zilla hisses a little at low speed so that was a good indication that it was working.
At least it’s an easy fix.
Congratulations! Let me know when you plan to drive it out to the East Coast so we can see it!
ReplyDeleteKids really like Miatas to begin with. But a battery-powered Miata!! You can see the excitement. I'm following this project closely; I'd love to put one of these together if I can swing the time and money. Also hoping Lithium or other battery tech becomes more reasonable for DIY; I need a bit more range and ability to reliably put 40 highway miles on in a day.
ReplyDeleteHi i am in iraq so i am lmtd to info . I read your artcl and wht a grt job!!! I have a great idea on a recharging system. Can you psbly help or guied me in the rt direction.My e-ml add is bigbeartyner@Yahoo.com Any help would be appreciated !!!!!!
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