Once the door trim is off I'd say it's easier to mount the relays than adopting the Lotus Position in the footwell ?
I guess I'm just used to assuming the {Lotus|Cessna|Piper} position, that's all. Agree that it's probably easier; just that metal access tube would get crowded with the addition of a more robust B+ and ground lead. Just proves there are more ways to skin the cat...
But my main reason for in-door mounting was that I could use heavier gauge wire from the relays to the motor and beef up the earth return rather than the weedy Lotus loom.
So pretty much everything inside the door is new, I cut back the actuating wires from the switch inside the cabin where I could get back to bright copper and soldered on new extensions. Fortunately you can still get the colour coded wire because the OEM copper wiring was very black inside the door, showing it's age and needed replacing.
I have British Wiring on speed dial.
Maintaining color coding is always a good thing, especially down the road. Nice thing about brit cars is that they standardized the color coding...so the wiring for windows, for instance, is the same (or should be) across marques. Learn one, and the others fall into line.
Aside from my own situation I agree there's no reason why the relays shouldn't be inside the cabin.
Brian
Hey, if you get a bit tired in the Lotus position, you're in a ready position to catnap and your significant other will just think you're working on something and leave you alone! Have to look on that as a plus...