sigtauenus
Active Member
Ok, basic electrical concepts here.
If I have a two-pin connector to an electrical accessory, is it safe to assume that one is ground and the other is switched supply?
If so, does it matter which is which?
Context of the question is wiring in the lumbar support that came with the fox body seats I recently upholstered.
The seats have the factory 2 pin connector that is a plastic piece vice the molded piece typically used in our cars. I'd like to just cut off the 2 pin connector and splice the wires, with one being grounded to the floor and the other hooked into a switched accessory plug. Does it matter which one gets grounded or connected to the switched supply? Either way it completes the circuit when the lumbar switch is pressed.
If I have a two-pin connector to an electrical accessory, is it safe to assume that one is ground and the other is switched supply?
If so, does it matter which is which?
Context of the question is wiring in the lumbar support that came with the fox body seats I recently upholstered.

The seats have the factory 2 pin connector that is a plastic piece vice the molded piece typically used in our cars. I'd like to just cut off the 2 pin connector and splice the wires, with one being grounded to the floor and the other hooked into a switched accessory plug. Does it matter which one gets grounded or connected to the switched supply? Either way it completes the circuit when the lumbar switch is pressed.