General Discussion Anything SuperHawk Related

Best GPS mount for our Superhawks?

Old Feb 3, 2015 | 12:51 PM
  #1  
Bloke's Avatar
Thread Starter
Junior Member
Squid
 
Joined: Jan 2015
Posts: 17
From: Bedford, NH
Bloke is on a distinguished road
Best GPS mount for our Superhawks?

Hey all,
As the title says, whats the best mount (& location) for getting a GPS on the SH?
Triple tree, gas cap, bars??

Cheers!
James
Old Feb 3, 2015 | 02:20 PM
  #2  
skokievtr's Avatar
RUNLEVELZERO #99
SuperBike
 
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 2,219
From: Skokie
skokievtr is on a distinguished road
RAM triple-tree stem mount with 3" extension to diamond adapter ball plate and GPS cradle for your unit. Power via cig lighter socket seen in side view.

My radar detector suction cups to the ZGDB and is hard wired.
Attached Thumbnails Best GPS mount for our Superhawks?-20140722_210955.jpg   Best GPS mount for our Superhawks?-20140722_211152.jpg  

Last edited by skokievtr; Feb 3, 2015 at 02:24 PM.
Old Feb 3, 2015 | 03:30 PM
  #3  
Wolverine's Avatar
Moderator
MotoGP
 
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 5,221
From: Gettysburg, Pa
Wolverine is on a distinguished road
Beat me to it Bret!
Name:  DSC05392.jpg
Views: 95
Size:  87.0 KB
Name:  DSC05391.jpg
Views: 145
Size:  67.9 KB
Name:  DSC05390.jpg
Views: 130
Size:  70.0 KB
Name:  DSC05389.jpg
Views: 137
Size:  110.4 KB
Name:  DSC05388.jpg
Views: 118
Size:  57.6 KB
To get power, look into Powerlet products:
Name:  DSC05393.jpg
Views: 122
Size:  42.2 KB

Last edited by Wolverine; Feb 3, 2015 at 03:40 PM.
Old Feb 3, 2015 | 06:47 PM
  #4  
smokinjoe73's Avatar
Senior Member
MotoGP
 
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 5,066
From: NYC
smokinjoe73 is on a distinguished road
+1 on the one wolverine posted. RAM mounts are so well built and offer many interchangeable parts. I have that same stem mount.

From all the ones I have seen no other system even comes close. You can buy different mounts for different devices.
Old Feb 4, 2015 | 08:12 AM
  #5  
tomb393's Avatar
Member
Squid
 
Joined: Oct 2012
Posts: 82
From: Chicago
tomb393 is on a distinguished road
I also use and swear by ram mount steering head setup but use the universal X grip mount to hold my phone (galaxy S4) which looks to be a similar size to wolverine's gps. It's surprising reliable.

Last edited by tomb393; Feb 4, 2015 at 08:14 AM.
Old Feb 4, 2015 | 03:18 PM
  #6  
ren's Avatar
ren
Senior Member
Back Marker
 
Joined: Nov 2013
Posts: 171
From: Los Angeles, CA
ren is on a distinguished road
I have that stem mount as well for my phone, love it

However the rubber plug that came with it was just a hair too small to stay securely in the stem without shrouding it in the cut off finger of a mechanics glove (Amazon.com: Liberty T2010W Nitrile Industrial Glove, Powder Free, Disposable, 4 mil Thickness, Medium, Blue (Box of 100): Industrial & Scientific)

Just that little extra mass on the outer diameter allowed it to grab a little better and not make me worry I'll lose a $700 phone randomly
Old Feb 4, 2015 | 05:09 PM
  #7  
tomb393's Avatar
Member
Squid
 
Joined: Oct 2012
Posts: 82
From: Chicago
tomb393 is on a distinguished road
Originally Posted by ren
I have that stem mount as well for my phone, love it

However the rubber plug that came with it was just a hair too small to stay securely in the stem
I have not has that problem at all.
Old Feb 4, 2015 | 09:22 PM
  #8  
Upland111's Avatar
Member
Superstock
 
Joined: Jul 2009
Posts: 285
From: Snohomish, WA.
Upland111 is on a distinguished road
If you have a Steering Stabilizer such as I, that eliminates the use of the stem mount. You can use the Ram mount that replaces 1/2 of the OEM clutch perch. That's the one I have and it works well with my Garmin 2497LMT. I can take pics if you like, but I am sure others use this style as well. Both types work great I'm sure.
Old Feb 5, 2015 | 12:31 PM
  #9  
Bloke's Avatar
Thread Starter
Junior Member
Squid
 
Joined: Jan 2015
Posts: 17
From: Bedford, NH
Bloke is on a distinguished road
Hey Wolverine + All,
Where & what are you tying into for power?
I assume this is the power socket kit you sourced:
Cigarette Socket Kit 24" (10 Amp) - Powerlet Products

Cheers,
James
Old Feb 5, 2015 | 12:59 PM
  #10  
smokinjoe73's Avatar
Senior Member
MotoGP
 
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 5,066
From: NYC
smokinjoe73 is on a distinguished road
I think I paid $2 shipped for mine. Here is one with blade connectors

Waterproof 12V 24V Outlet Power Socket Car Motorcycle Cigarette Lighter Plug | eBay

Here is one with leads. 12V 120W Car Motorcycle motorbike Cigarette Lighter Power Outlet Socket Plug | eBay

The expensive ones are from China anyway.

Or you can use a 12 volt extension cord and cut off one end. That is what I did.
Old Feb 5, 2015 | 02:58 PM
  #11  
Wolverine's Avatar
Moderator
MotoGP
 
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 5,221
From: Gettysburg, Pa
Wolverine is on a distinguished road
Originally Posted by Bloke
I assume this is the power socket kit you sourced
Yep, that's it. Powerlet is high quality stuff, along the same lines as the Eastern Beaver kits. I ran the 2 pole quick disconnect to a convenient spot so that I can easily connect my Battery Tender during the off season, it uses the exact same connector. Killed 2 birds with one stone so to speak.
Old Feb 6, 2015 | 08:26 AM
  #12  
Bloke's Avatar
Thread Starter
Junior Member
Squid
 
Joined: Jan 2015
Posts: 17
From: Bedford, NH
Bloke is on a distinguished road
Thanks! But again, I'm assuming you fed this & connected it directly to the battery?
Old Feb 6, 2015 | 08:44 AM
  #13  
Wolverine's Avatar
Moderator
MotoGP
 
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 5,221
From: Gettysburg, Pa
Wolverine is on a distinguished road
Yup!
Old Feb 6, 2015 | 09:46 AM
  #14  
smokinjoe73's Avatar
Senior Member
MotoGP
 
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 5,066
From: NYC
smokinjoe73 is on a distinguished road
I ran mine through a secondary fuse block that I use to power all my accessories. I also use the 12 volt outlet to plug in my charger overnight. Just converted the sae plug off the charger into a male 12 volt plug.
Old Feb 6, 2015 | 10:26 AM
  #15  
skokievtr's Avatar
RUNLEVELZERO #99
SuperBike
 
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 2,219
From: Skokie
skokievtr is on a distinguished road
I would not run direct to the battery without routing through a relay that is activated by an ignition "on" circuit. My power socket is permanently mounted and also switched so I can tun it on and off with the ignition on, this way it is easy to have it run on battery power without having to take it out of the cradle to slide the on switch on the GPS. Obviously, power to the socket should be fused. My RD, as I said is also hard wired, fused and powered off the back of the instruments. I also have 2 USB power outlets. One in the rear in my hard top case, and another mid-ship. Good to have to charge cell phones and my Scala Rider Q3 (which can be charged when operating). I also have a 2-pin SAE power plug direct to the battery (un-fused) that my Antigravity Batteries PPS XP-1 connects to to jump start the engine. This plug also connects to the Battery Tender (BT) only in a pinch and I can be connected to the BT USB power socket, BT volt meter and BT cigarette power socket. However, for normal battery charging, I have a fused 2.5 x 12 mm coax jack that connects to the battery and an adapter cable to the Battery Tender. This coax jack also can power my thermostat for my heated vest as well as the mini tire air pump (I made) and dual cigarette lighter power sockets.

BTW, I also have a Flight Dynamics LED bar graph volt meter located on the left fairing "flat" connected to the battery to monitor system voltage, as I also have custom twin 50w driving lights (mounted to tubes projected out from the fairing nostrils) that I'm converting to 6 or 8 watt LED cannons.
Old Feb 6, 2015 | 10:39 AM
  #16  
skokievtr's Avatar
RUNLEVELZERO #99
SuperBike
 
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 2,219
From: Skokie
skokievtr is on a distinguished road
The coaxial DC power plugs and jacks I'm referring to are much more efficient, compact and wear resistant. The size I use is IEC 60130-10:1971 Type A: 5.5 mm OD, 2.5 mm ID (without optional screw lock). These are readily available including already connected to 2-wire insulated 18 gauge leads.
Old Feb 6, 2015 | 10:42 AM
  #17  
smokinjoe73's Avatar
Senior Member
MotoGP
 
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 5,066
From: NYC
smokinjoe73 is on a distinguished road
Skokie that is one heck of a setup. Where are you talking about with the relay and why?

I like the idea of a switch to the outlet, I only didnt do that since I was concerned about a secondary point of failure (if that switch fails on the road you lose power). I just leave my dash outlet as full time as well as the cig plug/usb charger in the givi top case. (I want to be able to charge a phone in the givi whether riding or not.

I have my headlight high beam on a switch to save battery power in heavy traffic. I believe it has saved me in long stints in hot traffic with fan on constantly.
Old Feb 6, 2015 | 12:46 PM
  #18  
skokievtr's Avatar
RUNLEVELZERO #99
SuperBike
 
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 2,219
From: Skokie
skokievtr is on a distinguished road
Originally Posted by smokinjoe73
Skokie that is one heck of a setup. Where are you talking about with the relay and why?

All circuits should be fused or have a circuit breaker except in my case the 10 gauge wire pos & neg direct to the battery for jump starting. The pos cable has a diode in it to prevent high amperage power feeding back to the XP-1 PPS (which can also power/charge cell phones, GPS, lap tops, etc. I highly recommend the Antigravity Batteries XP-1 unit.)

I like the idea of a switch to the outlet, I only didn't do that since I was concerned about a secondary point of failure (if that switch fails on the road you lose power). I just leave my dash outlet as full time as well as the cig plug/usb charger in the givi top case. (I want to be able to charge a phone in the givi whether riding or not.

I feed all but a couple circuits from a secondary power buss fed through 10 gauge wire and fused direct from the battery. From the power buss all circuits are fused and most also run to their own relay that is triggered from an ignition-on circuit. The front cigarette light power socket has a simple DC automotive type illuminated switch. When the switch is on the outlet is powered. When the GPS is plugged into this outlet and the switch is on the GPS turns on; when the switch is then turned off the GPS asks if should remain on. If I want it to remain on I press yes. To turn the GPS off I turn on the ignition, flip the outlet's switch so it powers the GPS, then turn off the ignition and the GPS powers down if desired. As I said the cradle blocks access to the GBS power switch and turning it off would otherwise be a hassle. The outlet switch is dependable and not been a problem since installed 7 years ago. I would be more concerned with your headlight switch because if it fails you have no headlight!!

I have my headlight high beam on a switch to save battery power in heavy traffic. I believe it has saved me in long stints in hot traffic with fan on constantly.
Turning off your headlight in traffic IMO is a BAD idea safety wise! I run a headlight modulator on the high beam circuit (an infrared sensor keeps the modulator from activating at night and in tunnels). If your charging system and/or battery cannot handle the fan running in traffic with the headlight and brake light on, you have a problem with the system. I higher amperage demand on your charging system is actually a good thing because the voltage regulator/rectifier does not need to work so hard and get nearly as hot (excessive heat is a common cause of VRR failures).
Old Feb 6, 2015 | 04:44 PM
  #19  
smokinjoe73's Avatar
Senior Member
MotoGP
 
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 5,066
From: NYC
smokinjoe73 is on a distinguished road
Actually, I agree with you on the headlight thing but if that switch fails I still have lowbeam which is not switched. I found there are many times its nice to not have the headlight on burning power. Its mostly an emergency thing if I desperately need to get home by saving power. I have an LED 3rd eye which is brighter than stock.

I don't ride without a headlight on but there are times when its nice to not have it on (turning on ignition when doing work on bike, etc).
Old Feb 19, 2015 | 01:28 PM
  #20  
Bloke's Avatar
Thread Starter
Junior Member
Squid
 
Joined: Jan 2015
Posts: 17
From: Bedford, NH
Bloke is on a distinguished road
What would you recommend to wire it to, to have it only power the outlet with the ignition?
Whats the best thing to tie into? head light, directional?
Old Feb 19, 2015 | 02:15 PM
  #21  
smokinjoe73's Avatar
Senior Member
MotoGP
 
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 5,066
From: NYC
smokinjoe73 is on a distinguished road
I think it should be unswitched, only because I have needed mine to run the gps or charge my fone and didn't want to have to leave the ignition on.

If you want switched I think the 3rd eye light is the easiest place to get power.

Mine is run right from the battery with a fuse block in between

Last edited by smokinjoe73; Feb 20, 2015 at 02:27 PM.
Old Feb 19, 2015 | 03:04 PM
  #22  
Wolverine's Avatar
Moderator
MotoGP
 
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 5,221
From: Gettysburg, Pa
Wolverine is on a distinguished road
I agree w smokin, I do/did not want mine on a switched circuit and it goes directly to the battery w/ a fuse.

Last edited by Wolverine; Feb 19, 2015 at 03:07 PM.
Old Feb 19, 2015 | 09:24 PM
  #23  
sjscicluna's Avatar
Senior Member
Back Marker
 
Joined: Jul 2012
Posts: 144
From: Melbourne, Australia
sjscicluna is on a distinguished road
Battery > Fuse > Switch > relay > charger > Phone

thats how i have done it
the usb chargers will draw current so u need to switch them off some how so i used a single pole single throw toggle switch and turn it on if i need it.
Old Feb 20, 2015 | 07:40 AM
  #24  
Bloke's Avatar
Thread Starter
Junior Member
Squid
 
Joined: Jan 2015
Posts: 17
From: Bedford, NH
Bloke is on a distinguished road
Yeah i bought one of these: Bike master Dual USB port plug/charger.
Bikemaster Dual USB Port Plug Charger TC 6613WU SAE Socket w Brkt BM 152232 | eBay
I figured the USB would be easier for both cell & GPS. It is back-lit with a blue LED so people have complained about their battery's draining. So i deff want to do either a switch system or hook it upto something controlled via ignition to ensure i can kill it when required.
Related Topics
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
bikerpipes
Classifieds
5
Apr 24, 2012 08:44 PM
rednutt
Modifications - Cosmetic
8
Aug 29, 2011 09:07 AM
HRCVTR1000
Modifications - Cosmetic
29
Oct 7, 2009 08:25 PM
Randman
General Discussion
23
Dec 21, 2008 09:12 AM
Randman
Modifications - Cosmetic
9
Mar 31, 2006 08:52 AM


Thread Tools
Search this Thread

All times are GMT -7. The time now is 04:57 PM.


Top

© 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands



When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.