With mine, I took off the two post mounting faceplate, then trimmed out the rectangular hole the two halves of the housing make to fit the new stereo.
Then I measured and drille one hole from each side to put a stainless bolt into the side of the stereo.
The two pieces of foam, top and bottom will actually clam(p) the unit in place, but I wanted the two screws for a tiny bit of added security.
One tip. the two lower mounts are two of the windshield bolts. On mine those bolts were plastic, and they broke off after a while.
What I did was drill the holes larger in the upper housing, then used two of those rubber bunkies (the kind that hold the lowers on) and stainless bolts/washers to hold it up.
This way removal of the Cyclesound doesn't require taking it apart. It also adds some rubber mounting to the whole unit.
On a side note, when I mounted the CS properly, it got rid of over half the noise from my fairing on the highway!
Then I measured and drille one hole from each side to put a stainless bolt into the side of the stereo.
The two pieces of foam, top and bottom will actually clam(p) the unit in place, but I wanted the two screws for a tiny bit of added security.
One tip. the two lower mounts are two of the windshield bolts. On mine those bolts were plastic, and they broke off after a while.
What I did was drill the holes larger in the upper housing, then used two of those rubber bunkies (the kind that hold the lowers on) and stainless bolts/washers to hold it up.
This way removal of the Cyclesound doesn't require taking it apart. It also adds some rubber mounting to the whole unit.
On a side note, when I mounted the CS properly, it got rid of over half the noise from my fairing on the highway!
Comment