So after the show I had to pay the piper with a few weeks of work - and I'm still working on those projects but I needed a some shop therapy time and there was still the nagging issue of the tablet on the bike that needed to be solved.
For the show I made a small plate that just bolted the
Tripltek to the dash - it was good for the show since no one could walk off with it but for me I want the ability to remove the tablet and take it into a restaurant or my tent or whatever. So how do you hold a tablet or rather what sort of ways can hold something valuable firmly but still make it easy to take off?
The tablet's only mounting points are four m2 nutserts in the back cover. I'm dubious of their holding power but I'm usually surprised by the strength of bolts in shear and there's four. My first thought was a tripod head mount. If I trust a $10k camera to these tiny french cleats of aluminum surely they can hold a tablet. I cut out and milled a small 1/8" (3mm?) plate with a recess to allow a standard head to grip it.
There's also a pivoting tilting head used for video so I bought one of those as well - I know I could machine all this myself but why reinvent the wheel? My goal is to get the tablet mounted, low profile and be able to tilt it so it faces me if I'm standing or sitting, or just to adjust for glare, and to easily remove it. I ended up cutting up several cheap mounts to get to here.
It's interesting to break things and see how they work. I ended up having to buy a lot of very small fasteners that I don't typically use: M2, M3 and M4's. If I need something I don't have I tend to buy more so I have it for next time. My shop is very well stocked and the realization of many years of work.
Since the tablet is so large, much larger than any camera as far as foot print, I needed to make a new, longer knob to close the mount. The mount that I'm using is called an Arca-Swiss style and it's simply a pair of french cleats or dovetails that clamp. Simple and elegant. The knob is just simple aluminum which I dressed up by using my indexing head and a ball mill like I did when I made the knobs for the Naim amps.
I had to do a fair bit of machining to be able to keep it all low and tight.
Including cutting out one of the receptacles for a light or switch so that the knob could clear the return. Bead blasting aluminum makes everything look so nice and professional. And so do ball end mills and chamfers.

It remains to be seen if the friction of the tilting mechanism is going to be enough to hold the tablet. Ideally I think you'd want to remake the whole top dash panel and inset the tablet slightly with a pivot in the center. I spoke to the Tripltek folks and got them to send a tablet to Dimitri from
Aurora and he's going to probably machine a CNC perimeter case that would eliminate the four M2 screws and give a lot of protection. From there the case would be bombproof and very suitable for motorcycles so perhaps this will help make tablets an easier option. If this happens Mikael you are the reason.
The tablet is running
Drive Mode Dashboard for the launch screen. I have purchased and installed the OBD dongle which should wirelessly send diagnostic info to the dash but I haven't gotten that dialed in yet. I did install a black brake fluid resevior on the bars in place of the ubiquitous clear ones that always look like urine samples.
The final part of the equation is this bluetooth controller which just runs off the bikes power but links to the tablet seamlessly. It's a lot of controls over on the left side of the bars but so far I'm loving the ability to move the map around with my thumb and not having to rely on the touchscreen.
This week I need to find a good location to shoot the "beauty" shots of the bike and get them finished and then right up a story for Upshift about the build. At some point I'm hoping to head out to Mosko Moto and pick up some new luggage for the bike as well. Ben and I and maybe a couple of other folks are planning on taking a week to do some exploring in eastern Oregon in two weeks which will be the bikes first real test.
I have ridden the bike around town a little bit for some shake downs and it's really amazing on many levels. The tower is fantastic and really transforms the bike - being clear and open it's sort of like having no fairing and wind protection at the same time. The power the bike makes now is bonkers - it's just effortless to wheelie in almost any gear. It's nothing like what I started with - a complete transformation.
Lots of things are happening - hopefully this week I'll be able to say more.
Gregor