Team-BHP - Call of the wild - Mahindra Thar CRDe
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-   -   Call of the wild - Mahindra Thar CRDe (https://www.team-bhp.com/forum/long-term-ownership-reviews/121795-call-wild-mahindra-thar-crde-10.html)

Quote:

Originally Posted by renoy (Post 3084332)
Did you do padding for the tailgate? Can you put some pictures please.


Yes Renoy, I have padded the tail-gate, shall post pictures later during the day, when I return home. I don't use my Jeep for daily travel to office, you see..:)

Quote:

Originally Posted by cpbopanna (Post 3084345)
Yes Renoy, I have padded the tail-gate, shall post pictures later during the day, when I return home. I don't use my Jeep for daily travel to office, you see..:)

Thanks Bopanna! I can't figure how the rattling on the hard top rear door will go by padding the tail gate. Anyways looking forward to seeing the pictures

Quote:

Originally Posted by renoy (Post 3084390)
Thanks Bopanna! I can't figure how the rattling on the hard top rear door will go by padding the tail gate. Anyways looking forward to seeing the pictures

Renoy

Please see the pictures below. Normally, the rear door of the Hard top is pressed and kept in place by the tail gate, but the unfinished (inside surface of the )tail-gate allows the rear door of the hard top to rattle. :eek:

Once the tail-gate is padded, the pressing surface becomes thicker and holds the rear door of the hard top in place. Most importantly, the tail gate's looks are enhanced considerable!clap:

After fitting the Honda City seats up-from, ingress into the rear from in-between the seats had become a major problem. In addition, I found the front seats themselves were a bit too low for my liking.

Two changes were planned

1. Raise the driver's seat by 2" in the front and 1' in the rear. The seat frame was modified accordingly - the driver's seat is now ultra-comfortable!

2. The area under the tool box (below the front passenger's seat) is rust prone. In all my Jeeps, I have removed the tool box. So I removed the tool box in the current Jeep, and as expected, water stagnation marks were seen inside (uncovered holes at the bottom!). I have designed a new frame for the passenger seat, and made it foldable. WIP pictures are posted, there has been a slight change after the picture was taken, the seat is now hinged at the RHS side and not at the front. Two clips hold the seat in place, when in position. P.S. The new frame has been fixed to pre-existing holes on the floor, probably provided for seat fixing in the LHD export models!

Shall post detailed pictures shortly! I have posted close-up pictures of recently modified rear bench seat.

Quote:

Originally Posted by cpbopanna (Post 3065494)
Here are some juicy pictures of the Jeep Wrangler, at a dealership in Zurich. Just ordered for a pair of Wrangler rear lights for my Jeep, after the redesign of the rear bumpers, my vehicle shall be more Jeep than Thar! :-)

your jeep looks much better than the wrangler posted, well just my thought:D

As per our discussion, I have changed my rear seats with qualis front 2 seater with armrests on the wheel arches and head-rests, now they are ultra comfortable and feels very good with about 7 in gap between head and roof with 5'6" person sitting

Hi Vikram!
It was a pleasure meeting with you and your amazing Thar yesterday! I managed to read your thread in totality today and must compliment you once again on the efforts that you have put in on your Thar (shall I say Jeep?) project. You seem to be pretty restless and a perfectionist! I mean that as a compliment. I shall stay tuned to your thread and look forward to catching up with you again.
Cheers!
Srikanth

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kontoo (Post 3105610)
Hi Vikram!
It was a pleasure meeting with you and your amazing Thar yesterday! I managed to read your thread in totality today and must compliment you once again on the efforts that you have put in on your Thar (shall I say Jeep?) project. You seem to be pretty restless and a perfectionist! I mean that as a compliment. I shall stay tuned to your thread and look forward to catching up with you again.
Cheers!
Srikanth

Thanks Srikanth!
The pleasure (of meeting you) was all mine! :D Let's keep in touch.
BTW, your Skoda Suberb TSi is a beast in its own right, and a suave one at that! clap:
Cheers! Vikram

Quote:

Originally Posted by cpbopanna (Post 3091165)
Shall post detailed pictures shortly! I have posted close-up pictures of recently modified rear bench seat.

Are the modifications complete? Eagerly awaiting your update!

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dry Ice (Post 3122224)
Are the modifications complete? Eagerly awaiting your update!

Sorry Dry Ice, the modifications are complete (for now), however just had time to click a teaser image before the sun went down!

Quote:

Originally Posted by cpbopanna (Post 3124123)
Sorry Dry Ice, the modifications are complete (for now), however just had time to click a teaser image before the sun went down!

Looking good! The number placement is great, wonder why M&M didn't think of this.

The Jeep logo looks perfect as well! Awaiting the full set of pics now. :)

Had a chance to drive down to Mysore during the week-end in a downpour! The hard-top is indeed world-class, other than the noise from the rains, nothing else could be heard inside, no leaks - thank God!:Cheering:
A YouTube video link attached - http://youtu.be/AnYzlWgrKew

Attached are a few pictures of the foldable LHS front seat, ICE installed, etc.

Jeep Wrangler Mark 2..further mods, rear bumper redesigned yet again (so that the rear sticks out a wee bit), tail-light guards fabricated and installed (to prevent accidental damage from careless bike riders) high mount centre brake light and rear fog lamp added..updating pictures soon..

I wonder if any Thar owners faced a problem with the factory fitted air conditioner.
I had this problem of 'hunting', the air conditioner repeatedly going on and off.
This has three detrimental effects - it is absolutely irritating, the relay chatters when the air-con goes on and off repeatedly and can have premature failure and last and not the least, ineffective cooling.
I tried changing the temperature control knob on the dash board, but it did not help.
After doing a root-case analysis I realized that the thermistor (the temperature sensor which senses the temperature in the cabin and decides to run the compressor or cut it off) was improperly placed.
In a stock Thar, the thermistor is mounted on the cooling coil(behind the dash board). What happens is that the moment the air-con is switched on, the cooling coil obviously cools immediately and the thermistor senses the cool temperature and cuts off the compressor when in fact the cabin had not cooled down. In the next few minutes, the thermistor senses high temperature (because the cabin had not cooled down and the cooling coil is not cold) and starts the compressor.
This cycle goes on endlessly!
I came out with a simple solution, removed the thermistor from the cooling coil and attached it to another location under the dash board where it can actually sense the cabin temperature.
Voila! The compressor does not cut-off unnecessarily, the cabin really chills and the thermostat can actually be used to control the temperature and not just an air-con on-off knob!
The procedure is not that simple though, the entire dash board needed to be dismantled before the cooling coil and the thermistor can be accessed!
The entire procedure took 4 hours, but I feel it's worth the effort.
The exercise was carried out at Chrome Motors, Mysore Road, Bangalore

Quote:

Originally Posted by cpbopanna (Post 3135040)
I wonder if any Thar owners faced a problem with the factory fitted air conditioner.
I had this problem of 'hunting', the air conditioner repeatedly going on and off.
This has three detrimental effects - it is absolutely irritating, the relay chatters when the air-con goes on and off repeatedly and can have premature failure and last and not the least, ineffective cooling.
I tried changing the temperature control knob on the dash board, but it did not help.
After doing a root-case analysis I realized that the thermistor (the temperature sensor which senses the temperature in the cabin and decides to run the compressor or cut it off) was improperly placed.
In a stock Thar, the thermistor is mounted on the cooling coil(behind the dash board). What happens is that the moment the air-con is switched on, the cooling coil obviously cools immediately and the thermistor senses the cool temperature and cuts off the compressor when in fact the cabin had not cooled down. In the next few minutes, the thermistor senses high temperature (because the cabin had not cooled down and the cooling coil is not cold) and starts the compressor.
This cycle goes on endlessly!
I came out with a simple solution, removed the thermistor from the cooling coil and attached it to another location under the dash board where it can actually sense the cabin temperature.
Voila! The compressor does not cut-off unnecessarily, the cabin really chills and the thermostat can actually be used to control the temperature and not just an air-con on-off knob!
The procedure is not that simple though, the entire dash board needed to be dismantled before the cooling coil and the thermistor can be accessed!
The entire procedure took 4 hours, but I feel it's worth the effort.
The exercise was carried out at Chrome Motors, Mysore Road, Bangalore

Have just uploaded 2 pictures, the thermistor and the dismantled dash board.
Mods: Please merge the two posts into one, there appears to be a problem with team-bhp Android application, the program crashes each time I try to upload images!

Never faced any such problems actually my ac worked like a charm in this summer better than i20 I should say


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