mneblett said:I used a loooong plastic zip-tie with its head cut off from the trunk side of the battery compartment, poking it around until it came through the left wheel well.
Hi cptjam
I just put a deposit down on a 2022 RT limited and was looking for a long SAE plug that I can run directly from the battery for my wife's heated gear. I need the SAE end to come out near the rear seat left side when sitting on the bike, this is where she is used to plugging in her heated gear. I looked on the Cyclegear website but could not see the 6' SAE/battery terminal cable you mentioned? I think you would need a cable that long to make it from the battery to the passenger seat?
Thanks
Randy
Hi cptjam
I just put a deposit down on a 2022 RT limited and was looking for a long SAE plug that I can run directly from the battery for my wife's heated gear. I need the SAE end to come out near the rear seat left side when sitting on the bike, this is where she is used to plugging in her heated gear. I looked on the Cyclegear website but could not see the 6' SAE/battery terminal cable you mentioned? I think you would need a cable that long to make it from the battery to the passenger seat?
Thanks
Randy
Do you run it on the right or left side of the bike? I've never used any heated gear, but I might invest in a pair of gloves. Heated grips are nice, but they only warm my palms. The back of my hands still get cold.
JRat: Instead of hard-wired gloves, which require additional heated items like a liner to connect to, try battery operated, you can use them for riding or other outdoor activities where you want warm hands. I purchased several years ago from the Warming Store for about $100 and they work well. I also have battery operated heated socks from them, my feet and hands do get cold.
I just ordered/received one off the warnnsafe website.
https://www.warmnsafe.com/collectio...ts/battery-harness-5ft-for-victory-motorcycle
I removed the dealer-installed SAE cable from inside the trunk (and had to drive to the dealer to get the rubber plug in the back wall of the trunk that was removed to route the cable), and routed a line from a small gap at the left rear side of the battery compartment (at about top of the battery height) to the rear and along the left frame bracket. I used a loooong plastic zip-tie with its head cut off from the trunk side of the battery compartment, poking it around until it came through the left wheel well. The process was quite fiddly, but with patience and by taping the socket end of the leads to the long zip-tie, I was able to pull all of the cable through the back of the battery compartment so I could route it to where I wanted the socket.