I didn't really thank it, but that's OK. It's just the bloody page was moving up and down.
YES. YES. YES.
and YES.
Regards Philip A
One for the electrically/bright spark minded!
Does the RRC potentially suffer the same issue as D1 (or is it vice versa?) whereby the headlight switch can get hot/even catch fire because the whole load goes through the switch.
And if so,
(i) does a set of relays get completely rid of the concern - and
(ii) even if H4 headlights are inserted?
I've also scored a set of LED headlights which horror of horrors I'm thinking of trying out, so would anything apart from standard wiring still be recommended with what I assume would then be a greatly reduced current draw?
Cheers Gavin
D4 MY16 TDV6 - Cambo towing magic, Traxide Batteries, X Lifter, GAP ID Tool, Snorkel, Mitch Hitch, Clearview Mirrors, F&R Dashcams, CB
RRC MY95 LSE Vogue Softdash "Bessie" with MY99 TD5 and 4HP24 transplants
SADLY SOLD MY04 D2a TD5 auto and MY10 D4 2.7 both with lots of goodies
I didn't really thank it, but that's OK. It's just the bloody page was moving up and down.
YES. YES. YES.
and YES.
Regards Philip A
Mine has what looks to be either a factory loom ... or very well made aftermarket headlight wiring loom. It plugs into the drivers side bulb connector and runs wiring back to a bunch of 3 relays. These then drive the headlights through new headlight connectors (I reckon it might have even had a land rover label on the "add on" wiring loom). You need to make sure the 3 relays are identical. I had big issues with low beam disappearing as feedback through the relays didn't allow them to switch properly.
I find the land rover headlights fine.... Personally I wouldn't bother changing to LED's (givne the lights fitted are reliable and work quite ok............ I don't trust cheap LEDs at all to continue to work, especially somewhere critical like headlights!).
seeya,
Shane L.
Proper cars--
'92 Range Rover 3.8V8 ... 5spd manual
'85 Series II CX2500 GTi Turbo I :burnrubber:
'63 ID19 x 2 :wheelchair:
'72 DS21 ie 5spd pallas
Modern Junk:
'07 Poogoe 407 HDi 6spd manual :zzz:
'11 Poogoe RCZ HDI 6spd manual
Not sure about the fire risk, but rewired the headlights on my old rangie ( and discos) with relays and better wire size. Picked up 2 volts at the globe and made a very noticeable difference to light output.
'93 D1 V8 auto
'93 D1 200Tdi 2-door, ARB's, MD transfer, sill tanks, winch, 2"lift.......
'95 D1 V8 auto......gone
'86 V8 RRC.....gone
I have a relay for every filament in the H 4's (i.e. 4 total) in Wipac lenses with big power wire, switching wire is just the old loom.
Works well, DL.
Hopefully they're good ones and you'll love 'em.
If they're bad ones, I reckon you'll hate them.
But if good and you keep them, I don't think you'll need to touch the wiring.
I did this to my D1 a while back now and wouldn't have it any other way now.
I measured current draw on one headlight and found just a tad over 1 amp.
That was for either low beam or high beam .. same draw.
Taking any errors into account(even say 10% error) .. then max it would have been was 1.3 amp per globe.
Can't remember exactly but I think each fuse for the headlights are 20 amp(reds).
With the old std globes that desperately needed updated wiring, I used to see about 13.5v on the volt meter prior to changing headlights and tailights to LEDs(in fact LEDs all round other than the high mount brake light .. only to keep the cruise control operational!)
Now with LEDs all round volts stay at 13.9-14v with lights on.
Just an interesting parallel observation.
Arthur.
All these discos are giving me a heart attack!
'99 D1 300Tdi Auto ( now sold :( )
'03 D2 Td5 Auto
'03 D2a Td5 Auto
Hey Gavin
I put relays in my 89 and then fitted 90/130 H 4 globes..lots a
of light and won't stuff up my light switch.
I had one stuff up using 55/100 globes without the relays. Found a burnt rivet that also melted the plastic, this after about 6 months of it being all ok...but it wasn't ,so the relays went in.
I also converted my fog lights to 100watts each with a relay as well and they come on with the spotlights and 130 high beams.![]()
Range Rovers Have Charactors inside them
LROCWA Ex member 23 years
1971 Series 2A
2004 Discovery2a V8 Auto
2003 Discovery2a TD5 Manual
1982 4door man (sadly now gone)
1989 Vogue auto
2011 TDV8 Vogue
What would life be without a Rangie?
Actually, my voltage comments came out ambiguous.
The voltage I see is on the battery volt meter.
That is, in normal day time running I see about 14.2-ish volts most of the time.
With electrical stuff on, voltage at the battery drops .. eg. heater fan on, wipers on, etc.
So my comments were about voltage/voltage drop at the battery with led lights vs halogens.
Only test I did at the lights was to run ammeter while LEDs were on to see if they were 13.5w as rated ..
I saw about 1.1(something) amps. DMM is supposed to be 0.01amp accurate, which means that 1.1xxx amps I saw were probably accurate, maybe a touch more, maybe less, but the 13.5w rating claimed sounds about right.
Compare that to a std 55w halogen (4x more) then the LED places much less stress on what looks(and many find out) is kind'a fragile wiring.
Arthur.
All these discos are giving me a heart attack!
'99 D1 300Tdi Auto ( now sold :( )
'03 D2 Td5 Auto
'03 D2a Td5 Auto
Hi All,
Interesting post ....
AK83 - 1) what brand of LED globes did you buy as replacement for the front and rear globes.
2) What sort of dollars should you be spending .... whats everyone's recommendation for a brand of LED and is there an issue with changing indicator globes to LED?
3) Is the wiring issue ie fitting or relays for older Rangies pre 90's or is it a problem for all Rangies ... I have a 92 Classic.
4) Where are the relays normally located .. engine bay or under the dash??
My battery light on the dash dash does glow a dull red every so often and a sparky said its not an issue.
Never had a flat battery even though It's mainly driven once during the week (at night) and my weekend driver during the day ...... though it can be disconcerting.
Baggy
| Search AULRO.com ONLY! |
Search All the Web! |
|---|
|
|
|
Bookmarks