Our Third And Current CarPC
Our Third And Current CarPC
The next vehicle to enter our garage was the Volkswagen Golf GTI 1.8T, which we purchased brand new. Being veterans of the CarPC world at this stage, we had begun planning well before we even received the keys.
For this build we set ourselves some objectives for what we wanted our CarPC to be like. Here were our specific goals:
The CarPC had to look OEM and match the car's existing gauge cluster colours. No permanent modifications could be made to the vehicle. No drilling, cutting or splicing of wires (and nothing that could void the warranty.) The system had to use the factory amplifier and speakers, but not the factory head unit. A 7" LCD touch screen had to fit in the existing radio opening in the dash. All wiring was to be in PET loom (also known as "expando sleeving") and hidden from sight. The car XM satellite radio had to be integrated and controlled by the computer. The CarPC had to have one PCMCIA slot for cellular Internet. The case was required to be the same size as a factory CD changer, using factory brackets.With these requirements in place, we realized that lots of planning was needed if we wanted to build this within the cost and time budgets we had set for building and installing the completed system: £770 and one week.
We started by taking a series of measurements of the car so that we knew how far we would need to extend the main wiring harness. This harness consists of the following:
The main power to the computer The ignition power (this tells the computer when to turn on) Two USB cables Power to the LCD screen A triple-shielded VGA Cable for the screenThis bundle of cables was made 19 feet long and strung though PET loom to protect the wiring from shorts and cut wires (Figure 1). This was one problem we encountered in our old car, where we found that we could have a wire break under the carpet for no apparent reason. Obviously this time we wanted to avoid that problem!

Figure 1: Wiring harness with and without PET loom sleeving
For this system we used the following hardware:
VIA EPIA MII10000 Mini-ITX Main board 512 MB RAM M1-ATX 90 W Smart Automotive power supply 2.5" 80 GB Western Digital WD800 Scorpio 5400 RPM laptop hard drive Panasonic Slot Load DVD-ROM/CD-RW Combo Drive CW-8124-B (24x24x24 speed) Lilliput 7" VGA Touch screen 619GL-70NPWe used the following software:
Windows XP Professional Street Deck- Previous page Introduction
- Next page The Case
- Peculiar PC Peripherals
- Image Preview: World Of Warcraft Goes Midsummer And Archlord...
- Run Windows On Linux: Win4Lin Revisited
- Mike Sager's Scary Monsters and Super Freaks
- First Look: Samsung's BD-P1000 Blu-ray DVD Player
- TechEd 2006 Opinion: Ray Ozzie's little disruption
- MMR: Has E3 Become the Comdex of the Video Game Industry?
- Western Primavera: The Legacy of Sergio Leone
- The Western Reloaded
- Draft 802.11n Revealed: Part 2 - Interoperable? Not So Much
-
Your Own Server Part 1
-
build your own PC pros and
-
how to build your own solar
-
Build Your Own Silent HTPC
-
car pc
-
own subtitles
-
windows in your poket
-
windows xp in your pocket
-
turn your mobile
-
windows in your pocket
-
how to reset your laptop to
-
how to overclock your proc
-
finding your wep key
-
best graphics for your money
-
How to test your graphics card
-
your current security settings do not