LED Trunk Light Upgrade

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Introduction: LED Trunk Light Upgrade

About: I've been tearing things up since I was a kid. My parents say that I, "always wanted to take perfectly good things apart to see why they work." And, that I, "could destroy an anvil with a rubber…

Imagine arriving at the airport a few minutes late. You have to park the car and grab your bags as quickly as possible. Your wife rushes ahead to start the check-in process. You pop the trunk and look around to get the luggage. Grabbing what you see, you rush into the terminal. It is only after you are halfway to your destination that you allow yourself the chance to relax and think. Suddenly you realize that you did not have enough bags and must have left one bag in the trunk. Due to poor trunk lighting and a dark parking garage, you were not able to see that you left one small bag sitting in the trunk.

Don’t let this happen to you. Upgrade your trunk lights using LED strips.

The pitiful light that most car trunks have makes it hard to find anything in the dark. Some car owners might be lucky to have two pitiful lights in their trunk, but I believe every car I have ever owned has only had one. And it certainly wasn’t overly bright.

Step 1: Getting Started

Since I had previously bought a white LED strip for another project, I decided to use it for upgrading the lights in my trunk. You can see from the before and after pictures how much of a difference is made with this light upgrade.

Materials

Tools

  • Soldering iron
  • Hot glue gun (I've been very pleased with this one, but any would work)
  • Patience

Note: The LED strips need to be 12V so that you can power them directly from the existing car wiring. Fortunately it seems like the easiest and cheapest LED strips are 12 volt. There are also various colors of white. I like the bright white, but you can choose any white you wish.

Step 2: Finding the Poles

The light in my trunk is a simple festoon-type bulb. These are very easy to work with for this project. These are the bulbs that look like little glass bottles (or barrels) with metal tips on the end.

If your trunk light is a plug-in type bulb it is a little more difficult, but not impossible. The next step will show you how I did mine and explain how you would do the ones with the plug-in bulbs.

But before you can plug them in you must figure out which of the two wires going to the light from the car is positive and which is negative. This can be done with a multimeter or you can actually just guess. With these particular LED strips and the way they are designed, it won’t damage the LEDs to plug them in backwards, they just won’t work.

It is not a good habit to just plug things in and see if they work. LEDs can be destroyed from too much voltage in the wrong direction. It just so happens that because you are using a known power source (12V car battery) and a known type of LED strips (12V), then the likelihood of blowing them out is slim.

To find your positive and negative you might be able to look on your old bulb and see if it indicates which of the two connectors are positive and/or negative. It is not likely you will find anything.

If you have a multimeter you can test the polarity very easily. If you don't know how, I found a good video that will show you. (But if you just hook it up and try, ignoring my warning to not do it, I won't tell anyone).

Step 3: ​Wiring

The wires that you connect from your LED strips to the existing light can be anything small enough to work with down to about 22 gauge (larger gauge numbers mean smaller wires). I just used some extra wire I had lying around. This isn't too critical.

The connectors into the existing bulb socket will be somewhat dependent on your existing trunk light. In essence, all you are really trying to do is get a reliable connection from your new wires/lights to the old trunk light.

The LED strip will have a small mark on it to show positive and negative wires (+ and -). You need to solder two wires onto those small copper pads. One wire will go to the positive terminal of the light and one to the negative. Because my wires were all white, I colored a small black line onto the wires coming from the negative side of the LED strips (you can see them in one of the pictures).

For my lights I could use either a male spade connector or female connector. If using the male connector you will slide the blade between the existing light and the metal clip that holds the light in place (and provides the electrical connection). In my case, I removed the existing light and used female connectors and just slipped them over the existing positive and negative clips.

If your trunk light is a plug-in type light you will need a way to get the wire from the LED into the existing plug. This can be done by soldering appropriately sized paperclips to the ends of the wires and plugging them into the plug. I would recommend a blob of hot glue between the paperclips so they don’t short to one another. Hot glue is an insulator (at least all the ones I have tested) and it is easy to peel away when needed.

Of course, if you don’t mind making a modification to your car’s wiring, you can cut the existing light plug off and connect directly to the original wires. This can be done by soldering a wire from the LED strip to the existing wire or making some type of quick-connect system. For me it was easier to plug into the existing light than to modify the wiring.

Step 4: ​Installation

After testing to see that your wiring is correct, it is time to install the LED strips. All the strips I have come with an adhesive backing. In this case, that is probably sufficient. Clean the area where the lights will be installed to make sure you don’t have any oily substance on the paint that will keep the strips from sticking.

I put a long strip across the width of the trunk closest to the opening. Then I put two smaller strips in the back of the trunk (towards the front of the car). The only reason for two strips instead of one longer one is that it seemed right and there was a natural break splitting a long flat metal peice into two halves. Not very scientific, but it worked.

If the adhesive is not enough to hold the strips in place, you can always use hot glue to hold the strips. Hot glue (or tape) will be needed to pin the LED wiring in place. Use hot glue wherever the strips are not sticking well. I also apply a liberal amount of hot glue to the end of the strip where the wiring is attached. I have found that wherever I solder wiring to the end of an LED strip the glue does not seem to hold well there. With some extra glue in that area you can take the stress off the adhesive for the rest of the strip.

It is time to plug in the wires and see if the trunk lights up like a lighthouse on a foggy night. Of course, if you are doing this outside in bright daylight you might not enjoy the awe of the moment.

Step 5: Enjoyment

If you have everything hooked up right, then the LED strips should work any time the trunk lights would have worked originally.

The airport scenario at the beginning of this instructable is not merely theoretical. When I showed my lighting project to a friend he told me the story of how he left one of his wife’s bags sitting in the dark trunk on the wrong end of their vacation. Oops.

Don't let this happen to you. Upgrade your trunk lighting with the modern look of LED strips.

Travel Contest 2017

Participated in the
Travel Contest 2017

Lights Contest 2017

Participated in the
Lights Contest 2017

Before and After Contest 2017

Participated in the
Before and After Contest 2017

1 Person Made This Project!

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20 Comments

0
BigAndRed
BigAndRed

5 years ago

ready made led lights to clip into the light fitting.

theres hundreds of options on ebay that will clip strait in, I have done all the lights on my Subaru, map lights have a 6 LED panel between the metal fittings to fit inside the existing housing, interior light that is bright enough to read by.

http://www.ebay.com.au/itm/281649032971?_trksid=p2...

0
Rick velocity
Rick velocity

Reply 5 years ago

B & R, I've got a led lite stripe to put in the grille of my 1999 ford ranger. I want the LEDs to come on whenever the key is on run, any suggestions as to where to tap into? Possibly in & out of the fuse box?

0
BigAndRed
BigAndRed

Reply 5 years ago

giday Rick.
If you can run a wire from the accesory power on the key or the cigarette lighter to your + on led strip that will be simple, or the fuse box find which fuse is live when you turn key to acc.
The led's draw very little amps so you wont need a relay.
There is a small circuit I got on ebay that does that job and conects to the park lights.
http://www.ebay.com.au/itm/Car-LED-Daytime-Running-Light-Relay-Van-DRL-Control-Switch-Controller-12V-MA945-/232116691202?hash=item360b3ba102:g:tQYAAOSw-CpYBMBi
http://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/tQYAAOSw-CpYBMBi/s-l64.jpg

0
MrPapaya
MrPapaya

5 years ago

Pre-wired (with heat shrink reinforcement) 12 inch LED strips are available on Ebay. Two for $1.50 delivered.

I
also bought adaptors for the plug-in bulb receptacles. Simply plugs in
and offers you 12volt wires to connect to. TEN! for 99 cents
delivered. No need to cut the original wires, use paper clips, or
mangle the original connectors in any way. They sell these for the festoon bulbs also.

s-l500.jpg
0
Taz-Hood
Taz-Hood

Reply 5 years ago

MrPapaya: Could you provide links for the pre-wired (with heat shrink reinforcement) 12 inch LED strips and adaptors for the plug-in bulb receptacles? Thank you very much!

0
gkornbluth
gkornbluth

Reply 5 years ago

I found these on eBay. item number 310584712863.

Looks like a whole kit

0
Taz-Hood
Taz-Hood

Reply 5 years ago

MrPapaya & GKornbluth & DPeach: Thank you all so much for the eBay search suggestions. If you scroll down on that 310584712863 listing, there is a HUGE amount of information about LED lights that would be useful for starting any LED project. And, DPeach, many thanks for offering this nicely documented and well written Instructable. It gives me the confidence and assurance I need to believe I could actually take on a LED project on my own without making a mess of it. This is one of my favorite Instructables ever. You really are a "peach," kind sir.

0
billbillt
billbillt

Reply 5 years ago

I would also like the Ebay numbers of the lighting parts..

0
MrPapaya
MrPapaya

Reply 5 years ago

Sure. As Ebay listings come & go constantly, a direct link probably wouldn't last long. However try this....

Type this into the Ebay search box...

2Pcs 30cm 5050 SMD LED Strip Light Flexible 12V

Click on 'BUY IT NOW', and sort by 'Price + Shipping: lowest first'

I found the price has dropped since I last ordered. Now as low as $1.05 (for TWO strips, postage inc).

For the adaptors, search for this...

Truck Car Auto T10 LED Bulb Light Wire Harness Adapter 10 Pcs

They are currently TEN for 99 cents. Good luck.

0
dpeach
dpeach

Reply 5 years ago

Thanks for the info on the wire harness adapter. I never even thought that something like that would be available. Certainly easier than fabricating something from paper clips.

For the strip lights on eBay I would look for something like this: 12V led strip white.

For less than $10 (US) you can get 5 meters worth of lights.

0
User1
User1

Reply 5 years ago

+1 far better to do it this way.

Thanks for posting!

0
PKM
PKM

5 years ago

Ah! I was meaning to do this to my car over winter and I was intending to splice the LEDs in parallel with the bulb so both worked at the same time, but was put off by the idea of modifying the wiring. Using the festoon bulb holder to mount spade connectors is a great idea and completely reversable if you want to sell the car, maybe I'll revisit it

0
dpeach
dpeach

Reply 5 years ago

Even if you splice the wires, this would be an upgrade that doesn't cost much but adds value to the car when you sell it.

0
billbillt
billbillt

5 years ago

Thanks for the update!..

0
PhilS43
PhilS43

5 years ago

Hello

I just upgraded my cabin light on a VW Caddy/Rabbit van which had a festoon light like yours.

I cut out a small stripboard PCB to fit behind the lamp holder "prongs" and put four 5.2-cd Cree through hole cool white LEDs on it. The easiest way to drive these from any voltage between 5 and 90-volts DC is to use a constant current LED driver like the CL2 driver in a TO92 package. You can get 20-mA or 25-mA versions and one CL2 will drive at least two or probably more series connected LEDs.

4 LEDs at 25-mA is 100-mA, so at 12-volts is 1.2-watts, a lot less than the feeble festoon lamp, so not so much drain on the battery

0
6312CWR
6312CWR

5 years ago

Very cool idea. I am going with this for my Chrysler.

0
User1
User1

5 years ago

I'm betting the draw on the battery is probaly less too after upgrading the lights.

0
Pacocrator
Pacocrator

5 years ago

Good job!! With my first car my father taught me to do something similar when led strip lights was something new. Since them, and 2 cars later, I've done that improvement to all of them.

It's very easy and fast to do, a MUST for all trunks!!
I highly recommend people to do this instructable!!

Thank you!

0
Cherzer
Cherzer

5 years ago

I was amused that my first thought at seeing this was,...

"Ooo! Doing this with those CSI black lights would be a great update for serial murders. They could quickly check that they didn't leave any evidence behind."

Seriously Brain! Where did that come from?

...And then I remembered just minutes ago I was explaining the show Dexter to my mother. :)

0
bradonj
bradonj

5 years ago

This is one of those,"why didn't i think of that?", ideas.

Good job.