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2011 BMW 535xi M-Sport
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: North Jersey
Posts: 784
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Thanked 1 Time in 1 Post
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by jerryray
Thanks for that information,
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by jerryray
I would think you have a printout or some instructions as how this interfaces to the Front NAV screen?
Can thin be shared?
TIA
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TN member has already included a write-up for this in another post in the 07 Hybrid forum, here's his post:
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Originally Posted by 07hybrid
Made the plunge and bought an Eclipse BEC105 camera on ebay for $140. After shipping, the total came to $160. After the camera arrived, I tried to figure out how to best install the camera and mount it.
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by 07hybrid
www.oemvalue.com was an invaluable resource to peruse, but doesn’t tell you much on the mounting process itself. So, my laziness won out for the moment and I took it to an audio shop to get them to do the install. They looked at it, said they would have to drill some holes, quoted me $300 and said they could get to it in about a week. Wrong answers, so I started to do it myself. OK no pictures, but here’s how I did it.
You’ll need a soldering iron, silver solder, snap/fastener removal tool, wire snake, some cord or wire to fish the camera cable through tight spots, assorted tools and shrink tubing. You’ll also need some cables from an old computer case, the ones that connect to leds or to the cdroms. I’ll explain later.
Take out the liners for the trunk lid, the driver’s side trunk liners and the hybrid battery. That part is probably not required, but what the hell, I did it. You’ll also have to remove the driver’s side door kick plates/sills on the front and back doors. Next you’ll have to remove the assemblies for the shifter and the dash parts around the nav unit. The step by step disassembly instructions can be found on the Toyota Camry Hybrid Service Manual. Someone has posted that on this forum. You should download that.
There is a triangular opening on the lower part of the drivers side in the trunk that has wiring going through it. I used that opening to fish the snake through. It comes out by the space between the back seat and the door. Since I don’t have ham hands, I could squeeze my fingers through the gap to grab the snake. I attached the first bit of wire to the snake to feed it through to the trunk. Left that in place for the moment. I fished another length of wire through the side bracing from the back door to the front door. Also, left that in place for the moment. Then I ran a length of wire up the lower kick plate up, underneath the steering wheel to the dash console. I taped the camera cable to the wire and pulled it through, repeated that process with the wires I left in-place until it ended up in the trunk.
The BEC105 camera actually comes in two pieces. The camera has a length of cable attached ending in a three pin cannon plug. A long length of cable with a cannon plug that mates to the first plug and on the other end is a four pin white connector that will connect to an Eclipse nav unit. That plug on the camera cable will have to be cut. No sense in dissassemling the connector as the pins are too big for the R10 plug to Toyota navigation system. The pins for the wires I got from my old computers are the right size for this plug. There is only a small plastic lever that locks the pins into the connectors, so a needle can be used to pull the pins out of the connectors. There are lots of colors to choose from in the computer case so I used colors that are the same as on the camera wires. In case you’re wondering, the color code on the camera is white and black are tied together for ground. The yellow is video plus and the red in for the 6 volt power. I soldered the wires with pins on, cleaned everything up with the shrink tubing and inserted the pins into the R10 connector. Oemvalue website has the pin locations for these. Just make sure you push the pins all the way into the R10 plug so it will properly mate to the nav connectors. This part is a real pain in the ass and will take some gentle yet persistent pushing. I plugged it in and tested the camera at this point. No sense continuing if I had screwed this part up. Voila, it worked and I could see myself on the nav with the car on and the gear in reverse.
I decided to mount the camera on a metal license frame I bought. I took off the trunk part that has the Toyota logo and the license plate lights. It’s held on by five bolts and a couple of snap connectors. I ran the camera cable through the drivers side license plate light opening. That was my solution, but you might also just run the cable between the gap for this trunk part and trunk and not tighten the bolts as tight when you reassemble everything. As luck would have it, there is a grommet that has the truck release sensor wire running through. I used this to string the camera cable through. Look ma, no holes to drill. Once I took off the tape to allow access to the grommet, I used a long nosed needle nosed pliers to stretch open the grommet so I could force the camera cable through. Made the connections, aimed the camera, reassembled all the liners, sills and console parts and I was done with the cursing and yelling.
The picture quality isn’t HDTV, but it works. Does low light fairly well. Doesn’t work too well in bright sunlight. Not because of the camera, but that you can’t see the nav screen too well if there is too much glare. Total cost to me was $160 for the camera, $10 for the fastener removal tools since I misplaced the one I had and $5 for the solder since ditto, I couldn’t find that either. All told, I spent $175, that better than $1100 from the dealer. Feel free to ask questions if this is too confusing.
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I have also made a revision to a picture of the R10 connector, which you need to add the wires to (specific to the BEC105 Camera ONLY):
ALSO:
You will need a cable from your computer, whic has connectors similar to those required by the R10 connector.
If you have an extra CD Audio cable for the computer it would be perfect for the job. It is the wire that connects from the CD/DVD Drive to the motherboard. It is a flat black connector w/ 4 wires - If you are unsure, here's a picture of what i'm talking about:
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Current Rides:
2011 BMW 535i M-Sport xDrive (Mine), 2010 Infiniti G37S Convertible (Wife's), 2010 Toyota Rav4 Base 4cyl (Dog-mobile)
Previous Rides:
2010 Lexus RX350 AWD, 2007 Lexus GS350 AWD, 2007 Camry XLE V6, 2005 Acura TL, 2003 Nissan Maima SE, 1998 Lexus ES300
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