Thought I should give some details on how I solved this.... Threw my CCM in the bin after repairing various wires in door jambs and rear hatch, buying a 20 quid kit on ebay and two pairs of cable converter brackets at £8 a pair. FRONT DOORS : I found the gap where the motor's needed to be installed was too wide for the brackets provided. I ended up using two brackets on each of the front doors,so picked up some metal strip from a hardware shop fro the rear doors, though this wasn't needed in the end - read on!! Cable converter brackets were easy to install anwork well. The motor mounting brackets look a little heath robinson ( see photo's attached ) - but the motors are securely fitted. REAR DOORS : Fitting the motors in the required area, parellel to the door lock cable meant the glass would catch the motor when the lecky windows were operated. I'd read somewhere that a VW Golf owner had attached his c/l motors to the actual door lock mechanism. I removed the mech and cut away the plastic body with tin snips, exposing the actual locking part of the mech. Cutting the plastic doesn't affect the operation of the lock. See pics. The gap between the mech and the door skin was obviously tight, so I lobbed the rods supplied with the c/l kit and cut up a wire coathanger ( a quid for 6 from Wilko's ). The coathanger was thinner and easier to shape. I made a loop around the actual catch that operates the lock ( SEE CLOSE UP PIC OF OSR DOOR MECH ), reinstalling the mechanism in the door. Fitting the motor in the bottom edge of the door meant that it was well away from the glass. Trail fitting the coathanger wire was straightforward, checking that the wire wasn't fitted too tight and checked by hand ( motor not connected ) that the motor could travel its full extent. I then cut down the coathanger, looping it around the motor. connected the motor and ensured it travelled sufficiently to operate the lock. Both worked perfectly 1st time - all locks operating perfectly 4 weeks on! I'm sure the same method applied to the front door lock mechs - on hindsight I wish I hadn't bothered shelling out 16 quid for the cable converters. As one pair are now sat in the shed unused. The coathanger method worked really well and was easy to install. PHOTO'S : 1st two are of OSF door, rest are of the OSR door / lock. Can't see why this method can't be used on a mark 2 Galaxy. when installing the motor to OSR door, I took a feed off the wiring, insulating the ends and have tucked it under the os boot panel for the time being. I was intending to run this through to the fuel flap lock. The motor looks like a standard c/lock motor, however it differs to the motors in my locking kit and isn't a negative trigger lock. I've ordered two motor's from ebay for 4 quid a go. One for the fuel flap, the other for the boot lock. My remote fobs also have a boot release button, so I'll be sorting this out before the weather goes belly-up. Will add photo's and info on here or elsewhere on the forum.