

GPS Mounting Solutions
17 products
Showing 1 - 17 of 17 products
Rock-Solid GPS Mounting Brackets for Off-Road Racing
It doesn’t matter how good your Lowrance or Garmin unit is—if the bracket flexes over whoops, you’ll miss the turn. Our GPS Mounting Brackets collection gathers every billet clamp, RAM-ball arm, and weld-on cradle you need to lock navigation screens in place from Ensenada to La Paz. All mounts are CNC-machined, anodized or powder-coated, and test-fit on SCORE-legal cages and UTV dashes.
Highlighted Mounts & Kits
- RAM 1" Ball Double-Socket Arm Kit – 360° adjustability; mates to the factory Lowrance bracket in seconds.
- PCI Billet Tube Clamp – Hinged 1.75" & 2.0" roll-cage clamps with laser-cut backing plate.
- Flush-Dash Bezel for HDS-7 LIVE – ABS insert that recesses the unit for glare-free viewing.
- Quick-Release Swivel Base – Pull one pin and swap the GPS to your chase truck pre-run rig.
- Universal RAM Spine Clip Adapter – Converts Garmin Tread & Overlander to RAM-ball ecosystems.
Baja-Proof Engineering
Each bracket is cut from 6061-T6 aluminum or high-impact glass-filled nylon, then hard-anodized or shot-peen powder-coated for corrosion resistance. Grade-8 or A4-70 stainless hardware keeps threads alive after a season of washboard. We torque-test every mount to 5 g lateral load—roughly a 20-lb hit on a 9" display—so your GPS stays locked on when the rear tire stuffs a rock.
Fitment Matrix
Supports Lowrance HDS LIVE/Carbon/Elite FS, Garmin Tread/Overlander, and Magellan TRX7 bodies. Tube clamps fit 1.5", 1.75", 2.0", and 2.5" cage diameters; dash bezels match Can-Am X3, Polaris RZR Pro R, and Trophy-Truck sheet-metal consoles out of the box.
Install Tips
- Use blue Loctite on all mount screws; red only on set-screws you never plan to remove.
- Run power and NMEA cables through spiral wrap; zip-tie every 8″ along the cage.
- Set RAM arms to just-tight; overtightening crushes rubber balls and limits adjustability.
Why Upgrade?
Rigid mounts reduce screen shake, letting you read tiny contour lines at 90 mph. They also extend electronics life—less vibration equals fewer solder-joint failures and SD-card read errors. Spend once on proper brackets, and your nav stays readable for seasons to come.



