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RBS Customer Testimonial
9.5.07
I bought the
DT104 for a 2005 Tacoma pickup. As a retired engineer, I was
hesitant to drill the truck bumper for the sensors. What if the system
did not work? Would the bumper shape cause false echoes? Would
the circle cutter supplied work on a steel bumper? OK, I worry too
much. It is an "engineer thing." It is part of our job to
look for potential problems.
To gain
some confidence (before drilling that bumper) I did a bench
test. I mounted the four sensors on a piece of wood lath,
spaced as they would be on the Tacoma bumper. I connected the
controller, the speaker and a car battery. The lath and sensors were
propped up at bumper height. Tests showed the system worked "by the
book." When an object was moved within six feet, the
system produced slow beeps. As the object was
positioned nearer, the beep rate increased, until, at about 18
inches, the sound was steady. Perfect!
I removed the
bumper, drilled the four holes (the circle cutter worked fine on steel), and
mounted the sensors. Time for more tests: I temporarily wired the system
to the truck backup lights. The speaker was temporarily slid
through the opened truck and shell windows. Once more, the system
worked fine.
The next
step was to permanently mount the speaker in the truck cab, under the
driver's seat rail. The wires were run through a handy rubber floor plug,
and under the truck to the controller, which was installed in a storage bin in
the side of the truck bed. Driving tests confirmed the system worked
properly. I was impressed that the sensors could detect various size
objects, from cars down to chain link fence fabric. The beeping
always gave the correct distance to the object, from six feet to 18
inches.
One day later,
the system went silent: no beep on shifting into reverse, nothing when backing
up near an object. I contacted Casey at Autero. He volunteered to
ship a replacement system. Being "the engineer," I thought I
understood the problem. Surely, the controller had to be bad. What
else was there? Only the four, independently wired, sensors and the
speaker? I talked Casey into shipping only a replacement
controller. I returned the "bad" controller.
Unfortunately, the replacement controller made no difference. The system
remained silent. Oops! Maybe this engineer was not so clever?
I called Autero
(with my apology) to report what had happened. Casey shipped a
replacement speaker, which corrected the problem. Autero gets an
"A+" from me for their great customer service. Casey and Carly
could not have been more cooperative. When I offered to pay for the extra
two shipping charges, Casey graciously declined, placing the blame on the
product. Thank you.
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