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$50 and an Hour

Cheap and easy interior upgrades

by Julian Edgar

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A while ago we covered interior electrics upgrades – swapping-in the instrument panel or installing the trip computer from a higher trim level version of your car. Well, now we’re back doing a similar thing – but this time we’re not confining it to electrics and the whole lot was done for AUD$50 and in a single hour. None are cutting-edge, earth-shattering changes – they just make living with the car a little bit sweeter.

The car is an EF Ford Falcon Futura – but the ideas are near universal.

Ashtray/Radio Surround

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Here’s the standard radio surround and ashtray. As you can see, the moulding also contains the cigarette lighter. There were two things wrong with the original part – firstly, the ashtray catch was broken so the ashtray always stayed open, and secondly, the ashtray had to be open if the cigarette lighter socket was being used. That made using an MP3 transmitter/player (that plugs into the cigarette lighter socket) look pretty ugly.

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But undo just a few screws, undo the light and pull off the power and earth feeds to the cigarette lighter socket...

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...and insert the same part from the next model EL Falcon! With the change, the right-hand screw loses its locating hole so you need to use one with the right sized head that engages with the new fitting, but as for difficulties, that’s it! Five minutes to have a better looking, more practical assembly.

Sunvisors

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Stepping into the Futura (one up in trim level from bottom!) meant I noticed lots of cost-cutting – one example being hard vinyl where a more luxurious car would be running soft-touch velour. But upgrading to velour parts can be as simple as a two minute job - just unscrew the standard vinyl sunvisors and replace them with velour ones from an EL Fairmont model. They look and feel much better.

Switches

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At this stage, this one’s also for looks alone. Most downmarket models have lots of blanks in the dash where their upmarket brothers have switches.

The blanks look lousy...

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But a fix is only moments away! The new button is meant for the radio aerial up/down control, but at this stage I haven’t connected it to anything: I just wanted to fill the gap. But in addition to the aerial control (just install the electric aerial – the wiring appears to be there), the extra button could also be used as a thief-proofing fuel pump disable or to switch on and off anything you like.

Rear Footwell Light

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In this model, the back of the centre console looks like this: air vents and a blanking panel that’s almost unnoticeable.

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But pop out the blanking panel and you can see the mounting hole for a light bulb – and grab the light lens out of a Fairmont and it clips straight into place. The light bulb and its holder can come from the same source.

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The wiring connections for the new lamp are most easily sourced from the ignition keyhole light – just run a pair of wires to it and tap into the power and earth leads.

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Wow – looks factory... cos it is.

Switchplates

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And while strictly speaking it’s not an upgrade, if any switches or lettering are worn, pick up another while you’re at the wreckers.

Conclusion

They’re a bunch of little things. But they increase my enjoyment of the car, cost stuff-all – average of AUD$10 each – and took just 60 minutes to complete!

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