Before I get to talking about this little project, keep in mind that, as most of you know, I am an Accountant by trade. My ability/desire to "make things pretty" aren't my strongest attributes. A discerning look at my truck should make that apparent.
Pretty much every time I go wheelin' on harder trails, I come home with fewer tail lights than I start the day with. Clearly, I don't mind dragging the side of the 4Runner along trees, rocks, or dirt banks. The tail lights seem to always get either ripped out or crushed. So I looked for something a little more low profile than the stock tail lights. I looked around for a while and found these LED's that would fit in the space where the stock tail lights go, but I needed some way to mount them. I used a piece of sheet metal from Lowes and cut out pieces that would cover the original tail light holes and could just be attached with sheet metal screws. I cut the pig tail wiring off of a couple of busted tail lights and wired the LED's to them so I could plug and unplug them from the stock wiring harness from the truck. I'm mostly happy with the end result. The turn signals do "hyper flash" a little, due to the LED's having a much lower resistance than the stock bulbs. I could wire in a resistor to slow them down, but that's low priority at this point. Oddly enough, when I hit the hazard lights, they flash at a normal pace.
The only thing I'm not happy with is that the bracket that holds the LED's is wider than I'd like and flatter than the patch panels I made, so they do create a big gap that will probably make them easy to rip off if I do happen to catch them on something, but they are at least smaller (and cheaper! $25/pair vs. $45 per side) than the stock tail lights. I'll probably just ditch the black mounting bracket altogether and flush mount the LED's into the patch panel itself, so this likely isn't the final version, but it'll do for now.
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