Looks good. Did you leave the nato plug or did you get an adapter.
I made an adapter for the recovery. All I did was unplug the NATO plug at the junction box and used bullet connectors (which dont fit, but had to crimp them to make them fit snug) to plug in a 4-flat plug to fit on my truck.
It was a few extra min of work, but I would like to keep the wiring change to a min.
So what I did for ease of towing, and other other future buys, was get the vehicle end, and a generic truck end for a 7-flat/round plug to mount on a vehicle. That way I do not have to change any wiring at all, just switch to bulbs and go.
The military plug fits in the round mount perfect as shown, just the mounting holes do not match up, which can be fixed, but it will look better then trying to rig something up to go on my truck and having it not work, or look good. The mount will look OEM.
I plan on upgrading my 4-pin to a 7 flat and 4 pin plug, so I am not limited to one type of trailer, and will slice in the military plug on the other side of my hitch so I should have all the plugs covered.
I have not really done anything to the trailer yet, out of funds and time for right now. And just waiting on the SF97 to come in the mail.
I also have two LED oval STT lights from my horse trailer switch out 5 or 6 years ago, so I want to use those never used LEDs and mount them to a piece of wood, as well as magnets, and wire them to a 4 flat plug. Figured it would be be cheaper to make my own magnetic lights then it would be to buy some that no one can see when you are behind them. Plan is to make them so they can be dropped into a steakbed slot for the rails/bows or if those are not avaiable or on the item being towed, to be mounted with the magnets. I have the lights, might as well put them to use.
Some ideas for those with magnetic lights. If your lights have lenses on both sides, COVER one side with tape. Your not using that side anyway, and it will keep the sunlight from shining in and washing out the bulbs, making the lights dim and unsafe. The amber on one side, red on the other is for use overseas. You do not need the amber side, and it really only makes the lights half work, but having a lens on both side, there is no spot for a reflector, reducing the output.
I woukd take some chrome paint or silver paint and paint the inside of the amber or one side to act a reflector. If you want tape of a strip or square, so it will allow a little light to be seen from that side.
Just an observation from following one buyer out of the lot, they had Idaho plates, and I could hardly tell their lights were working. It was really sunny, and looked like someone was shining a flash light through one side and out the other. The brake lights and turns when on, looked like lights do before the battery dies.