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The Tantrum system. I'm used to getting
boxes from people with stuff just tossed in
them with some packing. Nice to see a
professional package on an item.
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The L.E.D.'s come with plenty of cable on
them. The 4 longest ones are 20 feet. Plenty
of length to run from the back of the 4 door
JK and up into the engine compartment.
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The Distribution
Block. All of your plugs from the L.E.D.'s and
your control cable will plug into this.
Supposedly it is waterproof, but it doesn't
strike me as being water proof. I didn't open it
up, so don't know for certain. I intend to mount
this high in the engine compartment, so that
shouldn't be to much of a concern. |
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The brains of the
whole system. The box has all the control
buttons on it so you don't need to use the
remote from inside the jeep if you leave it
accessible. The lighter plug can be disassembled
so that it can be hard wired into the electrical
system. Wiring is your preference, either
constant or switched power can be used.
Note: If wired to switched power the system will
not work unless you have the key in the ignition
and turned on. |
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The 4 button remote
with the antenna. This has a nice sliding shield
on it for those of us who have the tendency to
accidentally hit buttons on our keys. The
buttons on the remote did not correspond with
the actual features. Even the pictures on the
web site have the buttons wrong.
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Instructions
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Actual
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A - On/ Off
B - Reset/ Solid
C - Mode
D- Speed |
B - On/ Off
C - Reset/ Solid
A - Mode
D- Speed
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And last the parts
kit that includes screws for the L.E.D. pods,
double sided 3m sticky tape to mount the
L.E.D.'s, brackets and screws for the wires,
screws for the junction and double sided tape
for the junction box and / or control box.
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The first thing I
recommend is testing the system to see if
everything works. Hooking it up is simple. Plug
the 8 L.E.D.'s into the junction box, plug the
control cable from the control box into the
junction box, and then just plug the cigarette
lighter plug into the cigarette lighter. |
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Here's a bad
picture of the L.E.D.'s in the dark. |
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Installation: |
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The hardest part of
installing these lights is actually finding good
locations to mount them out of any possible
harms way that provide good lighting. The JK's
are harder than the TJ that I looked at. I was
installing these prior to putting on rocker
skids, and bumpers, so will probably have to
relocate them in the future. |
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I turned the lights
off in the garage and turned on the Tantrum
system and then just laid under the jeep looking
for locations. I wanted to illuminate both the
front and rear of each tire, so finding a nice
flat mounting point in that area. I do remember
doing this same thing with a set of the 55watt
lights from Wal-Mart. It was nice to be able to
grab a light and just hold it up into locations
without leaving a chunk of your hand behind.
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I was able to come
up with a few mounting locations along the sides
of the JK's frame. Once I get the rock rails in
place I may fabricate some brackets and aim the
middle front light towards the rear and the
middle rear light towards the front to give
better illumination. The same will go with the
bumpers. I may cross aim the lights for better
illumination.
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Front |

Middle Front
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Middle Rear
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Rear |
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Once you have the
mounting locations selected. Wipe off the backs
of the L.E.D. pods and the mounting location
with alcohol. |
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Remove the the
adhesive backing from one side of the two sided
3m tape. Be careful this stuff is really sticky.
Attach the disk to the back of the L.E.D. pod.
Remove the backing from the other side of the
disk and attach the L.E.D. pod to it's location.
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To better secure
the pods, you can drill two mounting holes using
the pod as a template and install two phillip's
head screws. |
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Locate a suitable
spot for your Distribution Block. I looked under
the hood for a suitable spot to position the
box. The best location is a flat piece of the
plastic mounting tray just behind the computer.
There isn't enough room to use the two supplied
screws here, but I cut a piece of the double
sided tape square and attached it to the back of
the Distribution Block. (Wait to actually attach
the junction box to the plastic tray until you
are satisfied with your wire routing.) |
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Route the wires
along the frame and up into the engine
compartment. Even with the length of the 4 door
JK I had plenty of wire left over. I secured
everything with zip ties and went on to locating
a good location for the Master Controller.
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VisonX provides
clips and screws to hold the wires on. These
will not screw into the frame, but will work on
the sheet metal of the body. I recommend waiting
until you have everything set in it's location
before you do any of the final clean up work.
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I have an
automatic, so finding a good point to penetrate
the firewall was easy. The spot where the clutch
master cylinder would be located has just a
piece of sticky tape substance over it. I cut a
slot in it using a razor blade and fed the
control wire from the Master Controller through
the slot. |
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The aluminum frame
for the dash provides a flat mounting surface
for the control box. Use the remaining portion
of the double sided tape to hold this in place.
Wipe off the back of the plastic and the
mounting location on the aluminum frame with
alcohol. I would recommend zip tying this in
place temporarily while you work out the
locations for all the parts. |
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If you want to just
use the cigarette lighter plug for the system,
you can run the wire behind the carpet and
underneath the center console to the passenger
side. |
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If you want to tap
into the constant power. You can disassemble the
plug, or just cut the wire off at the plug. If
you intend to cut the plug off I would wait
until you are ready to clean up all the wiring
on the vehicle. |
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Unscrew the end and remove the fuse.
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Remove the cap from the opposite side.
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Lift off the cover and remove the wires.
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Aarrgghh... Just cut the the plug off. |
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Remove all the
light wires from the junction box and plug the
control wire in. |
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Turn on the control
box and set for constant on. Plug the individual
wires in checking which light illuminates. I
used the end closet to the control cable as the
rear of the vehicle. |
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Once you have
everything located where they need to be, it is
time to clean up the installation. Jeep kept the
number of wire runs and lines to a minimum on
the JK's, so cleaning up the wire install is a
little more difficult than before. You can run
the wires a few different ways using the clips
provided by VisionX and a small dab of epoxy to
attach them to either the underside of the body,
or the frame rail. |
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Mount the
Distribution Block and the Master Controller in
place. Do not cut the cable from the Master
Controller to the Distribution Block, just coil
this up and tuck it away. There are at least
nine wires in side this cable. |
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With everything in
place I ran into the problem of having lots of
extra wire from the pods. I could easily pull it
back, coil it, and zip tie it out of the way.
For a nice clean install I decided to shorten
each wire to the proper length. |
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Cut the wire, trim
to a little longer than the correct length, and
twist the ends together. |
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Strip and twist the
extension wire onto the first with and Audio
Splice. I soldered this connection to ensure
that it won't come apart.
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Slide a piece of
Marine Grade heat shrink tubing (the Marine
Grade is actually waterproof) over one end, and
then heat gun the heat shrink tubing to seal the
wires. |
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I used another
piece of Marine Grade heat shrink tubing (the
Marine Grade is actually waterproof) over the
wires and then heat gun the heat shrink tubing
to seal the wires. |
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I connected the
wires into my sPOD. |
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Comparison: |
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I figured giving a
good comparison between a 55watt light and the
Tantrum LED Pods would be appropriate. I tried
to shoot all of these at the same settings on
the camera. The lights are brighter than shown
in the camera lens. I played around trying to
get a good approximation of what I was seeing,
but couldn't get a good contrast at that point.
The 55 watt fogs throw a bigger pattern, and
definitely put out more light. The LED are
softer and more focused. Cross aiming them would
give a bigger pattern. The LED's didn't destroy
my night vision as much as the Fogs did. I did
make the mistake after playing around with these
for 30 minutes in the garage of grabbing the Fog
with my hand. That Fog went in the trash
afterwards, since I dropped it and shattered it.
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Side by Side
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Ceiling at 7 feet |

Wall at 15 feet, 55watt Fog |

Wall at 15 feet, LED Pod
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Inside the garage, Dark
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Under the vehicle, LED's |

Under the vehicle, 55watt Fog |

Under the vehicle, both |
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Opinions: |
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You really don't
need to pick up the whole Tantrum system if you
just want some LED light pods. The system just
has the cool features of the strobe and the
remote. Which my niece's and nephew's love, and
Mom's cats HATE! Other than that the Pods can be
directly wired into a switch. Everything to run
the LED's is inside the Pod. The LED's are
bright enough to see obstacles at night without
blinding you. They are no where near as bright
as a 55 watt light underneath, but an advantage
is that they don't get burning hot like the
55watt lights do. I couldn't touch the 55watt
light after taking the comparison pictures, even
the bracket holding it was almost to hot to pick
up. The LED was just warm to the touch. I have
been out enough times with Jeeps running six or
more 55watt lights underneath. They were always
to bright and destroyed any night vision you
had. All it took was getting one good beam from
them in the face and all you could see was
spots. Not good if your the spotter.
A friend of mine installed these on his TJ.
Total time was only about 1 1/2 hours to
install, most of that was looking for the
mounting points. His first night run with these
at first pulled a few laughs at the disco effect
of the lights to his music. After the run his
friends were asking where they could get some
due to a few noted items. First being the soft
light, that actually allowed people to see where
the tire tracks were and where the tire's were
actually driving on the rocks. The second being
that when they got lost looking for a trail and
finally found it he stayed to mark the trail and
turned the lights to strobe. Everyone said it
was so easy getting back to him, they could
easily identify where he was. |
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Nighttime shots at various settings:
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