DougG69
Member
And I was doing so well with the wiring...
Aside from the backup lights & hood scoop lights (which I haven't gotten around to yet) I have everything working:
headlights
tail lights
parking lights
marker lights
turn signals
dash lights
courtesy lights
...except when I plug in the clock/light harness, it blows my 4 amp fuse. I'm pretty sure I am connecting it correctly. There is a 3 wire connector on the clock harness that I am plugging into the 2 wire connector & single female bullet connector from the main harness[nb]
[/nb].
It doesn't matter whether the clock is actually connected or not. I tried it both with & without, and either way - pop goes the weasel.
It is a new repro clock harness which I'm using LED lights in (they came with the LED kit for the gauges).
Just to demonstrate my complete lack of understanding of Ohm's Law and everything electrical, I'm going to ask: if it was a short in the main harness, why wouldn't it blow the fuse without the clock harness plugged in?
Aside from the backup lights & hood scoop lights (which I haven't gotten around to yet) I have everything working:
headlights
tail lights
parking lights
marker lights
turn signals
dash lights
courtesy lights
...except when I plug in the clock/light harness, it blows my 4 amp fuse. I'm pretty sure I am connecting it correctly. There is a 3 wire connector on the clock harness that I am plugging into the 2 wire connector & single female bullet connector from the main harness[nb]

It doesn't matter whether the clock is actually connected or not. I tried it both with & without, and either way - pop goes the weasel.
It is a new repro clock harness which I'm using LED lights in (they came with the LED kit for the gauges).
Just to demonstrate my complete lack of understanding of Ohm's Law and everything electrical, I'm going to ask: if it was a short in the main harness, why wouldn't it blow the fuse without the clock harness plugged in?