Front License Plate Frame Installation Mustang Mach‑E: Drill & No-Drill

writ­ten 2/17/25, updat­ed 8/24/25

Overview

What

Installing a front license plate frame by both drill and no-drill meth­ods for 2024 Ford Mus­tang Mach‑E GT Ral­ly

Why

To com­ply with state reg­u­la­tions for dis­play of front tags

Time and Effort

Time: 5–20 min­utes

Effort: Easy

Materials & Cost

Supplies

No-Drill

  • 3M Dou­ble Sided Water­proof VHB Mount­ing Foam Tape, 1.18in x 16.5 ft
  • Scis­sors
  • 91% Iso­propyl Alco­hol Wipe
  • Adhe­sion Pro­mot­er
  • 180–320 grit Sand­pa­per
  • Painter’s Tape
  • License Plate Frame (OEM)
  • Plate Frame Hard­ware (OEM)

Drill

  • Plas­tic (Poly) Riv­et Gun
  • 14″ Drill Bit and Dri­ver
  • License Plate Frame (OEM)
  • Plate Frame Hard­ware (OEM)

Cost

  • $16.99 for 3M tape roll (Ama­zon)
  • $13.95 for 3‑pack Adhe­sion Pro­mot­er pack­ets (Ama­zon — $4.65 per pack­et)
  • $17.99 for Plas­tic Riv­et Gun set (Ama­zon or cheap­er from Har­bor Freight)
  • Free all oth­ers (owned, came with car)

Process: Drill

Pros: Secure, wor­ry-free, fast

Cons: Cre­ate holes in bumper (could affect col­lec­tor’s val­ue), can’t remove eas­i­ly

  • Find fac­to­ry dim­ples on the bumper
  • Using a 14″ drill bit, drill holes
  • The 3rd/bottom hole does not have a fac­to­ry guide dim­ple

Align and hold the frame to the car in line with the 2 dim­ples to use it as a tem­plate for bot­tom hole dur­ing instal­la­tion

  • Find the plas­tic Pop Riv­ets that came with the frame. Push them through the frame and into the bumper
  • Slide the Riv­et Gun over the part stick­ing out, and squeeze. This will com­press the anchor back against the bumper. Release and squeeze again. You should hear a loud CLICK and the rod should come off (*See Notes for a look into how it works)

NOTE: You might have to squeeze a few times, mak­ing sure the gun is seat­ed all the way against the frame. If it fails (the rod breaks off, but the riv­et does not hold) push it out and try with the oth­er riv­et. In case this hap­pens, and you don’t have a spare, make sure to do the top 2 holes first because the frame will hold fine with just two attach­ments. See Notes sec­tion for more infor­ma­tion on the hard­ware

  • Slide the plate into the brack­et, secure with screws

DONE!

Process: No-Drill

Pros: Remov­able, no holes drilled into bumper, no mar after removal

Cons: Not 100% secure, chance of los­ing plate and frame

WARNING: My first attempt at this failed after a month. At the time, it was installed in the cold win­ter weath­er, and I did not employ the use of an adhe­sion promoter/sandpaper. This is writ­ten with the revi­sions in place. *See NOTES sec­tion for my updates regard­ing success/failure

  • Make sure your license plate frame has enough sur­face con­tact areas to adhere it well to the car with 3M tape

This is the vehi­cle’s orig­i­nal plate frame

  • Go out to your car and dry-fit the frame accord­ing to the fac­to­ry dim­pling on the bumper
  • Using painter’s tape, mark out bor­ders to help with align­ing (Rec­om­mend using strips that attach to both the frame and the car for eas­i­est align­ing)
  • Install license plate to frame (Can do this as the last step, if you pre­fer)

The OEM hard­ware will not scratch the car, stop­ping short of the end of the holes

  • With 180–320 grit Sand­pa­per, use cir­cu­lar motions to rough up the sur­faces where the tape will attach
  • Soak either a cot­ton pad or cot­ton ball with Rub­bing Alco­hol (high­er per­cent will dry faster) or use alco­hol wipes
  • Wipe down sur­faces with the alco­hol and wait for them to dry all the way
  • Open the Adhe­sion Pro­mot­er pack­et (I’d rec­om­mend gloves here) and wipe each con­tact point with a thin lay­er
  • Allow to dry (90–120 sec­onds)
  • Mea­sure out and cut the VHB 3M Tape to the size you need for your plate
  • Apply the sticky side to the plate, leav­ing the oth­er side of the tape (the one that will con­tact the car) still cov­ered

NOTE: 3M’s instruc­tion for this tape rec­om­mends heat­ing up with a hair dry­er if using in the win­ter. This tape is also move­able until com­pressed and mov­ing it should not affect adhe­sion prop­er­ties. Vis­cos­i­ty reach­es max­i­mum increase by 72 hours.

Rec­om­mend­ed: par­tial­ly remove the lin­ers in the house before going out­side. It can adhere tight­ly, so you may need to use tweez­ers if your nails aren’t able to get a good hold

  • Go out to your car
  • Dry fit the frame again, if you’d like
  • Use Rub­bing Alco­hol to wipe clean the install area of the car, mak­ing sure all for­eign debris is removed (oth­er­wise the tape will adhere to the debris instead of the car)
  • Wait until it it has evap­o­rat­ed
  • Peel off the lin­ers from the mount­ing tape
  • Align with the painter’s tape
  • Press
  • Keep press­ing with decent pres­sure for at least a minute (I did around 2–3 min­utes. It was eas­i­est with my feet while I messed around on a phone for a bit)
  • Remove the painter’s tape
I tugged and wig­gled it. Firm and strong hold!

Done!

Notes

  • Update 2/27/25 (10 days lat­er): Still hold­ing strong and no prob­lems! Been on the high­way, through work zones, lots of pot­holes, speed bumps, took turns too quick­ly, and plen­ty of stop and go traf­fic. So far, so good.
  • Update 3/25/25 (1 month): FAILURE!! Went to walk the dog and found the license plate frame on the ground! Good thing it was at home. I’ve decid­ed to leave the instruc­tions and post, up, though, because I still think it’s doable with some revi­sions.
  • It’s impor­tant to note that all the 3M tape was still adhered well to the car. In fact, they were dif­fi­cult to remove. Removal left a clean, unmarred sur­face — exact­ly the point of adher­ing as opposed to pok­ing holes. This means that the fail­ure point was on the side of the brack­et, and not the tape or the car por­tion. I won­der if it was because the weath­er start­ed to change. I installed it in the cold win­ter, and it fell off when the days warmed up and overnight.
  • Update 3/30/25: Com­pro­mise. While I did not want to risk the plate falling off again (what if it hap­pens while on the road?) I still think that it’s pos­si­ble to adhere with 3M tape with­out drilling. So, what I did this time was use the drill method for the top two holes and applied the revi­sion process (adhe­sion pro­mot­er and sand­pa­per) for the low­er hole. That way, I have it secure AND I did­n’t drill into non-dim­pled bumper. I will mon­i­tor and con­tin­ue observ­ing the bond of the low­er por­tion of the frame at reg­u­lar inter­vals to see if it holds up
  • Update 8/24/25: With the phys­i­cal attach­ments, my brack­et has not fall­en off, of course. I went to try and tug on the bot­tom part of the frame where there is just the adhe­sion, and while it did­n’t move much, I can’t real­ly get a good read because of the hard­ware on the upper por­tion. At this point, I’m going to say that I do NOT rec­om­mend the No-Drill method, but you are wel­come to try! If you do, com­ment and let me know if it works for you!
  • If you look at the word­ing on the back of the plate frame, you see the let­ters “PP+EPDM.” These stand for PolyPropy­lene (PP), plas­tic, and eth­yl­ene-propy­lene-diene monomers (EPDM), a syn­thet­ic rub­ber. 

Hard­ware Infor­ma­tion

Con­tain­er License Plate Hard­ware

BB53-17A386-AA

Ford

14″ thick­ness in hole

14″ thick­ness screws

Plas­tic Pop Riv­et — How it Works

Start

Top View

Bot­tom View

For fun, I tried it with dou­ble thick­ness to see what would hap­pen. The first attempt failed, high­light­ing that if the ridged por­tion does not grab, then it will not stay in place and become loose. The sec­ond attempt suc­ceed­ed but was extreme­ly dif­fi­cult to squeeze.

You can see how there’s more of the ridged part on the sin­gle thick­ness before it cut off

Here’s the failed riv­et

DIY: Solar Powered Wildlife Waterer/Birdbath

writ­ten 6/17/24, updat­ed 6/27/25

Overview

What

DIY foun­tain with small water pump for mov­ing water

Why

Water aer­a­tion not only pre­vents stag­na­tion but also kills mos­qui­to lar­vae. Birds and oth­er wildlife enjoy drink­ing and occa­sion­al­ly bathing in it

Time and Effort

1 per­son project

Time: 30 min­utes, more for paint

Effort: Easy

Materials and Cost

*8″ Deep Plant Saucers (what­ev­er size you want)

*Plas­tic Round Bird Feed­er Bowl

6W Mini USB Solar Pan­el 5V/1A

5V USB Sub­mersible Water Pump with Tub­ing

Out­door Acrylic Paint and Brush­es

Out­door Mod­Podge

Your choice of stand/pole mount/holder

$16.99

$11.99

$13.99

$9.99

$20

$6.99

$18.99

I already had the paint, brush­es, Mod Podge, and sub­mersible pump, plus a coupon, so my total cost is dif­fer­ent than the total cost of sup­plies

Oth­er Sup­plies: Dri­ver, Drill Bits, Rock(s)

*Option­al or In-Place-Of: 3D Print­ed bowl and/or tray is the eas­i­est and cheap­est method if you hap­pen to have one

Total Cost: $98.94

My Cost: $56.36

Bird Bath Hold­er options:

  • Pole-mount dish
  • In-ground dish hold­er
  • Deck rail-mount­ed dish
  • Free-stand­ing hold­er
  • Or just on the ground

Process

This orig­i­nal­ly start­ed as a bird­bath, but not only was it too small to be a bird­bath, but none of the ani­mals used it as that. They were more inter­est­ed in drink­ing the water, so now it’s a Wildlife Water­er. Occa­sion­al­ly, the cam­era aimed at it will catch a bird bathing in it

Schematic

Drill Holes in Upper Tray

Drill Holes in the plas­tic bird bowl (small­er holes for water pas­sage, big for the tube), and a notch for the pow­er cord.

You can place the water hose in the cen­ter or off­set depend­ing on your pref­er­ence

*3D Printer

Eas­i­est and cheap­est method if you hap­pen to own a machine

If using 3D print­er, I’d rec­om­mend this BOWL cus­tomized to your spec­i­fi­ca­tions (reduced the thick­ness). You can add a lit­tle notch for the pow­er cord.

When in doubt choose a dark col­or (pre­vents light pen­e­tra­tion which allows algae to grow). My design allows for the sys­tem to be eas­i­ly tak­en apart and cleaned. The rea­son there’s a reser­voir of water that hous­es the pump under­neath the tray is that offer­ing ani­mals tox­ic algae or fun­gus-infect­ed water can kill them.

The lit­tle tabs are option­al
The tray had bro­ken over the win­ter just enough to allow the cord to pass through.

Paint

If using clear saucers/bowl, paint out­er lay­er (use 3 or 4 lay­ers as they are so thin). Dark­er are bet­ter col­ors to pre­vent algae.

Note: Appar­ent­ly, birds are attract­ed to either their own plumage col­ors or for the shy birds, neu­tral col­ors like drab green, gray, and brown. Birds sup­pos­ed­ly dis­like white.

Assembly

Because I was using cheap saucers, I stacked them 3 or 4 deep (for strength). Then, the sub­mersible pump goes on the bot­tom. On top of that, place the drilled bowl to cre­ate sep­a­ra­tion from the motor, pass­ing the tube and cords through their respec­tive holes

Fill with water

By the Power of the Sun

Con­nect the male USB of the sub­mersible pump to the female USB on the solar pan­el (or how­ev­er your pow­er hookup is) and test out the water flow.

Inter­est­ing Note: there must be enough light to start the motor, but sub­se­quent pow­er requires much less (physics!). Mean­ing, even though direct sun­light is need­ed to start the pump, indi­rect sun­light (part shade) is okay for con­tin­u­ous oper­a­tion

Con­nect the cables

Pow­er!!!

Start­ing ‘er up!
Sun on! Sun Off!

Tube Orientation Options

  • Cut the tube short­er
  • Place a lit­tle aer­a­tor on the end and drill small holes in the top of the tube to cre­ate a sprin­kler effect
  • No tube, just pure aer­a­tion

Long Tube — water cur­rent

With­out Tube — lots of bub­bles

Short Tube

I was test­ing stuff out on a heat­ed water­er I bought lat­er after mak­ing mine

Aer­at­ed Short Tube

The aer­a­tor is just a ran­dom thing I found out­side on the ground while walk­ing the dog. It just so hap­pens to be the right size and flex­i­bil­i­ty for the hose. If you look up “Rub­ber Sil­i­cone Round Plugs” you’ll see sev­er­al of them. Like THIS

Additions

Place dec­o­ra­tive rocks or plain rocks so that bees and small­er birds can perch safe­ly

Get (or 3D print) foun­tain noz­zles for fun sprays

Cleaning!!!

You MUST clean these! As stat­ed above, algae blooms are tox­ic to ani­mals. Sim­i­lar­ly, if too much debris rots in the water­er, fun­gus can also infect the ani­mals. Warm water and soap. If using rocks, I’ll brush them with a brush. Let them air dry, then return them to the crit­ters

Nasty algae. When clean­ing, my paper tow­el turned red. Red algae blooms are extreme­ly tox­ic. Not just for the wild crit­ters, but also my dog who likes to lick stuff all the time

Finished!