After-market rear view camera?

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OldGeek said:
Morgan said:
Alas! I have found the part number for the charge port lamp....8390A010. I'm looking into availability of the back up camera as well. Although I'm pretty sure that it is a thing of the past, that doesn't mean you can't find it aftermarket! :)
here is a link to a set of reviews to after market backup cameras:
http://rear-view-cameras-review.toptenreviews.com
https://autodecorlab.com/best-aftermarket-backup-cameras-reviews/
The top rated one looks very nice and is likely what I will get if I purchase my iMiev from Morgan.

Come to think of it, if I were a dealer, I would buy these in bulk and offer these to my customers as an in house add-on for any vehicle that did,'t already have this as a factory option. The dealer would make an additional profit and the customer would have the option of a great safety feature. [Morgan: hint hint] :idea:

I think you are right choice for that to picking good rear camera. I need help from you to give a suggested to pick the right one.
 
I apologize for bumping this old topic, but I have done quite a bit of research on this, so I want to share my experience.
My 24rls came equipped with a base mount for a Furrion camera on the rear of the trailer, but I didn't want to spend $400 for a wireless camera with a small 4.3" monitor. Over the years I've tried several backup cameras, but none have ever worked out long term. I mainly wanted to use them to see what was behind me when changing lanes and turning. One eventually got condensation inside the lens, a couple were always intermittent and all just had screens too small to be practical.

Last year I picked up a Good Sam (Rand McNally) 7735 https://wheelstips.com/best-rear-view-camera It has a 7" screen. I knew it had a video input but never got around to using it until recently. Thought I would list what I bought to add a rear view camera to it. I know it would be more convenient to have a permanent mount, but I don't want another camera sitting out in the elements 24x7 and eventually losing its seal, so I used the large suction mount I wasn't using that came with my GPS. I added a safety strap in case it lost its grip but so far some very rough roads haven't made it come loose. It is mounted to my trailer's rear window.

Good Sam - Rand McNally 7735 GPS (Camping World)
20FT GPS Camera Video Cable 2.5mm Aux to RCA AV-IN Adapter
Pioneer Backup Camera ND-BC8 (Best Buy)
10' RCA video cable (Best Buy)

The Pioneer camera came with 33' of cable that reaches up to the hitch area. The GPS video adapter cable has 20' of cable that reaches from my truck's dash to the hitch. Then the 10' RCA cable is used to connect those 2 cables together when hitched.

The 7735 GPS detects when a video signal is present and displays a touch icon in the upper left corner. Touch it once and the rear camera shows. Touch the screen anywhere and it goes back to the normal GPS screen. 7" is a decent size to see what's going on behind the trailer. All backup cameras have a wide angle lens and focal point designed up close backing up, but the larger screen helps see what's going on a few hundred feet further back when planning a lane change.
On YouTube there are a lot of interesting videos on this topic, I will share with you, one of them, hope this will help someone. Good luck
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iwhSWTnSaw0
 
I'll add my experience installing a camera here.

Bought this on Amazon.
https://www.amazon.com/Pyle-Distanc...yle+mirror&dpPl=1&dpID=41eIR2svlUL&ref=plSrch

Pretty happy with how it turned out and for $60 you can't go too wrong. Directly replaces stock review mirror. I didn't want to add a monitor to the dash and the mirror type that clip onto the existing mirror look cheap. There were a few tricky points on the install but it wasn't really hard and took about 2 hours to install. Lots of that was figuring out how to go about things.

Running wiring inside the rear hatch was the hardest part. I to fed cables for camera through the license plate light then up the left side inside the hatch. Right side is shorter run but there it's already a cable loom there which be made feeding the cable difficult. I removed the high mount brake light and bolt for the hatch strut in order to use a wire hook to help feed the cables through. Then through the grommet into the car. Tucked along the headliner up to the front.

The cables that came with it were too short to reach the backup light (power for camera) and for power for the mirror. I extended both. Otherwise the video cables barely reach connecting up just above the left side foot well.

Camera works great. Mostly just need it for parallel parking. Which I do a lot of, half the reason why I bought this car. I love being able to fit in some tiny spots :D
 
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