SInce I have all sorts of extra time on my hands now, I decided to redo my dual battery setup. I didnt like the look of both batteries crammed into the front corner anyway not to mention it made the driverside front corner sit low.lol, so I put the stock battery tray back in.
I had to pull the bed to replace the fuel pump-to-tank seal, so while I had the be off I made a frame out of 1x1 tubing and stainless tray to hold my second batt. I think the side terminal battery actually works out better in this situation. I ran 4 gauge wire along the frame rail and bolted it on the always hot starter solenoid terminal. I ran a 4 gauge ground cable to a bolt for the spring hanger.
I also added in some auxiliary terminals for jump starts and anything else that requires high amp 12 volt power. (like a receiver mount winch).
I looked at the price on real remote mount terminals and at 15 bucks a piece I decided I could make something work with what I had laying around.lol
Heres what I came up with, I used a 1/2" coupling nut as a terminal, and I found a couple plastic bushings (I have no clue what they were from.lol) to make the insulators with. I cut the bushings in half with the band saw then used a belt sander to sand down the out edges and leave a ridge the stick trough the hole in the bed to keep the bolt from grounding out.
Hopefully the pictures will better explain:
I used side post battery cables between the batt and the aux terminals, and grounded out on the same hanger bolt.
Bottom of the terminals
I kinda liked the truggy look.lol
I also found a cool brake upgrade for all of you out there running Exploder disc brakes. It was time for new pads and rotors in the back so I pulled everthing off and readjusted the p-brake (which now actually works

) And after I got the new pads on I noticed that they only utilize 2/3 of the rotor surface. I recalled that newer Crown Vics/Grand Marquis use very similar calipers and rotors (I work in an auto parts store, so I see a lot of them.lol) So I took my Expo pads back and pulled out a set of 2000 Crown Vic pads (non police, the only difference is the size of the clip thats slips inside the caliper piston since police cars use thicker walled phenolic pistons) The Crown Vic pads are the exact same shape, but are about 3/8" wider. They are a little thicker too.
Here are a few comparison pics.
Expo pad
Crown Vic pad
Expo pad on top
The Crown Vic pads may look short, but it is just because they are Wagner pads, so the edges are beveled more since they are a thicker pad.
With the added thickness of the Crown Vic pads the caliper is almost maxed out on inward inward (toward the rotor) travel.
-PlumCrazy