Alright, I finally finished my antenna install, at least as much as I'm going to do for now. It's far from perfect, but I learned a lot along the way.
For my grommet, I ended up modifying a
Jandorf 1-1/2 in. Dia. Rubber Grommet from Ace Hardware.
I enlarged the hole so it could fit 1/2" split flexible tubing through it.
Next I used a hacksaw and made the groove deeper so it would fit the roughly 15/16" hole that I was putting it into. After that, I beveled the inner side so it would be easier to slip into the hole while still ensuring I have a fair amount of rubber sitting on the inside lip for waterproofing.
My decision to make a custom grommet was not one I made without trying quite a few alternatives first.
- Factory power lift gate grommet
- Subaru only sells the grommet with the power lift gate kit. I wasn't going to buy a $200+ lift gate cylinder just to use the grommet.
- Trunk door grommet
- I considered buying one of the grommets that connects the trunk electrical connections to the body. Subaru doesn't sell it separately.
- Also, the hole in the body is almost 1 3/8" diameter, so the same grommet wouldn't fit in the hole I have anyway.
- Rigid irrigation right-angle connector (would be inserted through a hole in another grommet of sorts)
- The idea was to angle the connection exit point down to help prevent water from getting in.
- The antenna wouldn't fit through it without me cutting the end off and re-terminating it (something I'm not versed at and didn't want to take on)
- Tail light grommet
- Exactly what I'm looking for, but not sold separately.
Trunk door grommet:
Tail light grommet:
The good news is that my custom grommet fits!
I tried using clear flexible tubing through the hole, but I was worried it would bend too much when the trunk closes and compromise the seal. The black flex tubing had a lot of challenges, notably, the inner diameter is exactly 3/8", the diameter of the antenna connection. Running the antenna connection through it was a pain. I had hopes of using the tubing all of the way down into the trunk area so I could then plug it in case water gets in, but I gave up on that pretty quickly.
Since it was split tubing, I needed to seal it, and sealing it was where I started running into problems. I tried heat shrink, but it made the tube a hair too small to fit the antenna. Initially I used several layers of electrical tape, but the pressure on the tube also made it slightly too small for the antenna. In the end, I did use electrical tape, but only a layer or two.
With the cable dropped through down into the trunk, I used a small piece of flex tubing to hold the cable in place while ensuring it can wiggle a little if it needs to:
Here's where it exits the rear pillar:
Routing the cable to the front, I tried to protect it as much as I could, but found one cable path (that made sense at the time) that ends up resulting in a pinch point once the foam panels are reinstalled:
My final solution was to run it above that metal brace and push it as far back under the plastic panel as I could. I didn't have a great spot to add another guide tube, so I used electrical tape in a few areas.
(hit picture limit, to be continued)