CVN 80
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Mar 8, 2024
- Threads
- 2
- Messages
- 68
- Reaction score
- 112
- Location
- Hampton Roads, Virginia
- First Name
- Chris
- Vehicle(s)
- 2020 Mustang GT 6MT
- Thread starter
- #1
While I love my 2020 GT 6MT, I've come up with a new project to correct its various design flaws: A conversion to electromechanical instrumentation & switchgear.
I'm not really looking for more power or better handling, partly because I'm not driver enough to exploit the huge amount of both Ford designed into the car and partly because it's a daily, not a track slut. But I'm about at my wit's end with the vehicle's generally electronic character - the touchscreen...and the backup sensors...and the rearview camera...and the 1/4" window drop...and all the other supposed progress that's made me seriously consider an '88 Trans Am for my next car.
Whenever I get in and start up, the first things I do are turn off the backup beeper and the traction control because of course they reset when you shut the vehicle off. I'm sick of having to do this every time I want to go somewhere. It's not my fault some halfwit backed over his kid. I always walk around the car before I leave and I look around when reversing. I don't need a backup camera. The Safetyism, and the implication that I'm some kind of halfwit, is off-putting to say the least.
So my plan is to replace the instrument cluster and centerstack with fabricated panels full of gauges & switches from the Summit Racing catalog - or wherever -and convert the car's functions (other than engine control) from electronic to electromechanical, each on its own independent circuit.
I don't want 50 different options for each control, I'd much rather have 50 different controls that each do one thing. I don't want to "customize my driving experience." IDGAF about infotainment or fancy animation. What do I need streaming audio for? I got off the Progress Train at MP3 Avenue. I don't want the car binging & bonging at me about Low Washer Fluid or an open hood. I know the hood's open - who do you think opened it? It's what you do when you change oil!
The touchscreen lags in both very hot and very cold weather. WHEN it eventually breaks, it'll do so without warning and be impossible to repair. Which, I know, is the style of the time.
Which means I'm gonna have to build a switch panel for the HVAC, modify the window trim & lock out the window-drop feature, wire each gauge on its own sensor, isolate the ignition interlock in favor of an Outside Context Problem and so forth. This will no doubt require bypassing the body control modules, but since this car's a keeper and I'm never selling it, resale value is a non-concern. Good Lord, there's no reason a power window should be complex!
This is inline with my general future-proofing of the car, such as my other long-term project to replace all the plastic parts in the engine bay with proper metal ones. I swear, this age of plastic and electronics we live in is wearing thin enough to see through.
Anyway, now I have a reason to install those arming-cover switches I've had my eye on. And proper mechanical door locks.
Anything else I should consider for this conversion?
I'm not really looking for more power or better handling, partly because I'm not driver enough to exploit the huge amount of both Ford designed into the car and partly because it's a daily, not a track slut. But I'm about at my wit's end with the vehicle's generally electronic character - the touchscreen...and the backup sensors...and the rearview camera...and the 1/4" window drop...and all the other supposed progress that's made me seriously consider an '88 Trans Am for my next car.
Whenever I get in and start up, the first things I do are turn off the backup beeper and the traction control because of course they reset when you shut the vehicle off. I'm sick of having to do this every time I want to go somewhere. It's not my fault some halfwit backed over his kid. I always walk around the car before I leave and I look around when reversing. I don't need a backup camera. The Safetyism, and the implication that I'm some kind of halfwit, is off-putting to say the least.
So my plan is to replace the instrument cluster and centerstack with fabricated panels full of gauges & switches from the Summit Racing catalog - or wherever -and convert the car's functions (other than engine control) from electronic to electromechanical, each on its own independent circuit.
I don't want 50 different options for each control, I'd much rather have 50 different controls that each do one thing. I don't want to "customize my driving experience." IDGAF about infotainment or fancy animation. What do I need streaming audio for? I got off the Progress Train at MP3 Avenue. I don't want the car binging & bonging at me about Low Washer Fluid or an open hood. I know the hood's open - who do you think opened it? It's what you do when you change oil!
The touchscreen lags in both very hot and very cold weather. WHEN it eventually breaks, it'll do so without warning and be impossible to repair. Which, I know, is the style of the time.
Which means I'm gonna have to build a switch panel for the HVAC, modify the window trim & lock out the window-drop feature, wire each gauge on its own sensor, isolate the ignition interlock in favor of an Outside Context Problem and so forth. This will no doubt require bypassing the body control modules, but since this car's a keeper and I'm never selling it, resale value is a non-concern. Good Lord, there's no reason a power window should be complex!
This is inline with my general future-proofing of the car, such as my other long-term project to replace all the plastic parts in the engine bay with proper metal ones. I swear, this age of plastic and electronics we live in is wearing thin enough to see through.
Anyway, now I have a reason to install those arming-cover switches I've had my eye on. And proper mechanical door locks.
Anything else I should consider for this conversion?
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