This guide has been a little overdue for me, as I finished the bulk of this installation over a month ago. You can see it in my "rig" thread here:
https://www.auszookers.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=4&t=57941&p=946045#p946038)
If you have a JB/JT "GV3" Grand Vitara, you would know that in almost all markets (I think UK is the exception) there was no available trim or option to have folding side mirrors. Heated mirrors or integrated indicators into the mirror covers? Sure! But not ones that fold in for protection like a lot of modern or luxury cars.
However, certain JDM models of GV's twin, the Escudo, came not just with heated mirrors and integrated indicators.. but with folding function as well! My intention for this thread is to help people on how to get these mirrors working in the GV. I would consider the difficulty of the whole job to be medium or intermediate level, mainly since getting wires run from the door to the car body is more involved than in older cars. There are some tools used that may not be in the typical toolbox but the techniques used are fairly low level (This was my first "big job" on my Zook and it overall went quite smoothly, albeit slowly because of my first-timer caution IMO).
What materials you need:- Escudo folding mirrors (Duh!) - Part Nos 84701-78K60-XXX (for RHS) and 84702-78K60-XXX (for LHS).
- Folding mirror switch for drivers side door - Part No. 37950-62J10 (If you are wrecker/junkyard diving, these switches are also used in Swifts and SX4s from same era)
- x2 pins from a PC 6/8-pin PCIE cable
- Approx. 15m of stranded 0.5mm2 wire (automotive grade recommended. You could use wire with less core area but I found going smaller meant poorer quality crimping)
- Spade crimp connectors (red type) - 26 pairs minimum (Male + Female, 2.8mm or 4.8mm spade types recommended)
- Spade piggyback crimps (red type) - 4 Minimum with the counterpart male/female spade connectors.
- Heatshrink
- Cable Ties
NOTE 1: This is an estimate on the minimums required. You can prepare more wire for safety or use more piggyback crimps to keep existing plugs in case you need to return to original parts like I have, but that's up to you
NOTE 2: "XXX" at the end of the mirror part nos. denotes the colour code for your vehicle. These mirrors only ever came in colors ZDL, ZJ3,Z2S, Z7T, ZJP and ZMA only. If you have a different colour code, you'll need to remove the mirror covers from its housing and paint them yourself.
What tools you need:- Trim removal tool (Alternatively, a thin, strong piece of wood)
- Set of screwdrivers
- Utility knife
- Wire stripping and crimping tool
- Drill with ~3.3mm dia. drill bit.
- Socket set (alternatively, a simple shifter would do the trick)
- Electrical pin removal tool
- Multimeter
Step 1: Removing the Door Trim and Original MirrorsFirst off, lets start by opening up the door panel to get access to the door loom and to remove the existing side mirrors. For those that haven't done this before, it's a petty simple and straightforward process. Directly behind the mirror base (in the car interior) there is a triangular, black plastic pod covering the mounting bolts, and depending on your trim level these pods may house your tweeters. These are held in by a single plastic trim plug and can be easily pulled off by hand.
Next, move onto the larger door cards. In the door hand grab, there is a small plastic access panel which can be removed using 2 flathead screwdrivers. Behind this access there is a Phillips head screw - remove it.
Attachment:
ScrewDoorGrab.jpeg
Around the door handle, there is a plastic retention cover. Use the trim removal tool or a small flathead screwdriver from the inside to pry this cover out from the rest of the door card.
Attachment:
DoorHandleCover.jpeg
From here, it is just a matter of popping out the trim plugs on the bottom half of the door card from the door to separate. Use the trim removal tool to work around under the bottom of the door card and lift out. Once all plugs are popped out, make sure to lift the door card in an up-and-outwards motion, as there is one internal clip on the door card which slides and locks the trim in place.
Attachment:
Door Card Removal.jpeg
Unplug the door mirror switch from the door loom, and you should be able to separate the door card now completely.
Step 2: Recrimping the JDM plugOne of the issues with installing the JDM side mirrors is to do with the plug to connect to the door loom. The standard GV uses a 7-pin connector, easily recognizable by the round bump and circular pin layout on one side, whereas the JDM mirrors use a rectangular "9-pin" connector (called this way online as 9 pins are used in the plug). We somehow need to get this to connect up properly to our door loom.
Attachment:
DontFit.jpg
The best way (IMO) to do this is to completely get rid of the 9-pin JDM connector and replace them with spade crimp connectors, while being very careful to remember what wire colour is for what function. You can determine what wire does what yourself with a bit of visual identification and a multimeter but since I've already done that, below is a wire colour list and quick diagram of the JDM plug for this purpose:
Attachment:
JDMMirrorPinout.png
To the uninitiated, crimp connectors are colour-coded for compatible wire size. Make sure to use red crimp connectors as the wires in the mirror are small and are really at the minimum core area for crimping. You can use standard size spade connectors (6.3mm width) if that's all you have, but I do recommend using 2.8mm or 4.8mm spades if possible, so that you can easier hide the new connectors behind the door panel. Once the mirror side is done, move on the door loom side, either replacing the 7-pin connector altogether with crimp connections or by bypassing the plug like I did. Once all done, make sure to insulate using heat shrink to prevent any shorts.
IMAGE 6
Step 3: Building the Folding Mirror CircuitAt the same time, we will need to build the required wiring for the folding mirror circuit, and if required, other circuits like for indicators. For a better overview of what we are needing, below is the service manual wiring diagram for the JB424/JB632 power mirror circuit:
Attachment:
GV3PwrMrrCircuitDiag.png
As you can see, the mirror heater wires are already existing in the door loom, even if heated mirrors was not an option in your market. The indicator wires however, may or may not be in the door loom plug depending on whether your vehicle originally had integrated indicators in the mirrors or not. My GV didn't come with mirror indicators from the factory, so I will have to run a new indicator circuit along with the folding mirror lines into the door loom. To reduce the amount of wires I need to run around the car, I will be connecting the indicator ground to the mirror heater ground line since after tracing the electrical diagrams, the heater ground endpoint is the same as for the indicators anyways.
The folding mirror circuit design is relatively simple and all wiring will come out from our new folding mirror switch in the drivers side door cluster. We shall base our folding mirror circuit design off of the one from the SX4 in the diagram below:
Attachment:
SX4CircuitDiag.jpg
..So 2 sets of 2 wires, one set running directly from the folding mirror switch to the drivers side, and another branching off from that which makes it's way to the passengers side door mirror. For those also doing indicators, that means 3 wires total need to run from the drivers door (with 1 wire about 50cm longer than the others - you will see why later) to the passengers door. Let's focus on the switch to drivers side runs first though.
The new folding mirror switch is fully compatible with the drivers door cluster. The door loom plug connecting to the switch does fit, but doesn't have the pins populated for the relevant folding circuit. I ended up getting the whole driver's door cluster but it's not necessary - the mirror switch pod can be pushed out with the help of a small flathead screwdriver lifting the surrounding retention tabs.
Attachment:
OriginalVsFoldingMirrorSwitch.jpeg
Originally I was going to jankily solder the wires directly to the new switch pins, but I then found out the pins from a male computer PCIE power cable fits inside the door loom plug almost perfectly. Use a pin removal tool to extract the pins from the PCIE plug, and a small flathead screwdriver to push these pins into the free slots of the loom connector (pin Nos 7 and 8 - the black wires shown in the photo below).
Attachment:
PCIEpins.jpg
Use a Y/piggyback connector when connecting these lines to the drivers mirror so that we can create a branch out connecting the passenger side mirror to the circuit later.