Header banner
Revain logoHome Page
Justin Puranik photo
Greece, Athens
1 Level
718 Review
51 Karma

Review on πŸ”Š Unleash the Power of the FIAMM 72112 Freeway Blaster LOW Note Horn! by Justin Puranik

Revainrating 5 out of 5

Impressive replacement

These horns are really impressive. Also have a High Note (Fiamm 72102 Freeway Blaster HIGH Note Horn https://www.amazon.com/dp/B000FKKOK6/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_krbUBbZFW8M8N) to replace the stock horns on my 2004 Highlander because both died. Replacing the low horn on the 2004 Highlander (located in the space under the driver's side headlight sockets) was more problematic than replacing the high horn. I managed to remove the original low horn from the sight hole under the wing. There is just enough room to squeeze your forearm and slip the ratchet onto the mounting screw. Mine was pretty rusty so it took some effort. Once the old beeping stops, you can simply disconnect the cable from the clamp. There is no need to cut the wire to connect the spade connectors as it is already inside the plastic connector. You can attach the original wire to the new horn without removing this plastic piece. You may need to cut the zip tie securing the wire to the inside wall so it can reach the connector on the new horn after installation. End piece of the new horn at the rear by attaching it together with the supplied mounting bracket. Be sure to use the smaller bracket hole on the horn side. Installing it in a car requires some flexibility and patience. It helps if someone holds it from underneath and someone reaches between the battery and headlight connectors to start threading the mounting screws. Once you start, you are free at home. Ratchet it from below, reroute the hot wire to the remaining terminal on the new horn and sound the test horn. Enjoy the roar that would eat the weak horn of the original breakfast horn

Pros
  • Lighting and power
Cons
  • No automatic