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Thread: Auto Electrical Equivalent of Electric Busbar??

  1. #11
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    Hello All,

    I bought one of these Modular Design Blade Fuse Block that is described as this modular design negative bus bar and blade fuse holder series is ideal for marine and auto applications.

    https://www.jaycar.com.au/12-way-fuse-block-with-bus-bar/p/SZ2032

    There are two columns of slots for fuses in the raised main part of the fuse block. Each side is then stepped down on the side and a line of terminals are spaced at regular intervals. At the top or head of the fused part is a single bolt and nut terminal post which is marked + or positive.

    The second lower half of the Blade Fuse Block consists of a number of stepped bus bars which feature rows of screws and washers to clamp down negative terminals. On the lower - bottom half it is marked with (-) negative.

    Does this sound like I took the correct procedure:

    I loosened the bolt on the Positive battery terminal and took note of the six wires hanging off it

    The main thick wire that goes from the + terminal to the started motor was stayed where it was
    A red wire was held by a ringlet crimp and bolted to the + battery terminal
    The other end of this thick wire was connected to the "fuse blocks" + terminal.
    I then fit the five wires that had previously been attached to the + battery terminal along with my two new wires that feeds two Bosch five-pin relays
    The starter motor wire was fixed to the + battery terminal. Now only two wires are connected to the + battery terminal
    Fuses for each wire going into a positive terminal were connected. Each wire coming in had a few matched to it.

    I loosened the negative battery terminal and removed the four wires that were clamped down there.
    I kept the thick wire that leads to the chassis where it was
    I made a new thick wire that is clamped one end to the negative terminal and fixed the other end of this wire to the negative post on the Fuse box.

    This new negative wire to the fuse box was clamped down to the negative terminal on the batter along with the wire that runs to the chassis as an earth. So now only two wires are connected to the negative battery terminal

    I then separately attached each of the wires that were bolted to the negative busbar terminals

    Does all this sound okay?

    Should I add a wire from the negative terminal on the fused box and make a new earthing point somewhere?

    After I had re-wired the battery terminals I wired up a new system for the head lights.

    I was just finished the wiring just as it was turning dark. I turned on the Shorty's key and nothing. No lights came on in the cab no needles in any of the gauges shifter.

    The battery was flat as flat can be. The battery is now out of the Land Rover and is being charged overnight.

    How disappointing!

    I suppose the point of this message is that I want to make sure I have wired everything up correctly to the Fuse Box . Also, to confirm that the only thing that prevented me from things like the ignition and the head lights works is hopefully down to the battery needing charge.

    I have included a diagram of what I did. (Sorry I cannot delete the first diagram that looked a bit crowded)
    Attached Images Attached Images

  2. #12
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    Without being able to inspect what you did, your wiring changes seem reasonable.

    I wouldn't fit another earth link between the fuse block earth and the body/chassis because if the main body earth strap from the battery fails then all the current for the starter would pass though your new wire from the negative battery terminal to the fuse block which would cause that wire to burn-out and possibly start a fire.
    MY21.5 L405 D350 Vogue SE with 19s. Produce LLAMS for LR/RR, Jeep GC/Dodge Ram
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  3. #13
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    When doing auto earthing....

    IMHO and in a perfect world

    on old school electrics there should be one earth cable going from the battery to the engine OR to a primary chassis earth (and then to the other), from that point all other earths should branch.

    the issue you will have if you go for more of a networked pattern and you are relying on body earthing when a main earth cable fails then every secondary earth can potentially carry the full current of the starter or the alternator.

    New school stuff follows a slightly different rule set because computers and charge monitoring systems.
    Dave

    "In a Landrover the other vehicle is your crumple zone."

    For spelling call Rogets, for mechanicing call me.

    Fozzy, 2.25D SIII Ex DCA Ute
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  4. #14
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    Hello All,

    Can a faulty 87A pin on a Bosch Five Pin Relay cause the relay to squeal? I can feel that the relay is opening and closing very fast and this is causing a vibration that in turn, emits a squeal. Take the connector to 87A off and silence rules.

    Here is how I have wired the Low Beam circuit for the headlights.

    Power to the lights is via the dash mounted off/on switch. The 2A has a floor mounted dipswitch.

    Terminal 30 Power Input
    Terminal 85 Ground
    Terminal 86 Trigger from Dip Switch
    Terminal 87 Output for Low Beam (Left)
    Terminal 87A Output for Low Beam (Right)

    For the High Beam I have a second five pin relay that is wired the same way - the only difference is that it picks up the high beams.

    When I have swapped the relays around the circuit that squealed before is silent and the previously silent circuit is squealing.

    ================================================== =======================================

    I also changed the wiring on the Five pin by just having an output off Pin 87 and linking it into the Low Beam Circuit. This means that Pin 87A is not used at all. Both headlights for low beam work

    Same circuit for the high beam - output Pin 87 linked to common high beam and both lights work. No hook up to pin 87A and no squeal out of either relay.

    Is it just a dicky relay?

    ================================================== ======================================

    Did I mention that after turning on the dash lights switch I have never moved out of a vehicles seat and arrive at the front of a vehicle before!

    I did not know whether I was somehow frying a gekko and it was in its death throws, or that I was about to see big clouds of smoke and sparks flying everywhere. It makes one hell of a loud squeal.

    Kind regards
    Lionel

  5. #15
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    youve made a self resetting relay.

    the power is coming through the switched side of the relay to drive the signal side of the relay...

    when the power comes on the relay tries to pull over, when the relay pulls over the power is cut (87a is NC to 30) so the relay relaxes, when the relay relaxes the contacts close the power comes on and when the power comes on.........

    (add a small capacitor across the coil and you can make a pulse generator to fire an ignition coil)

    what you have is a switching relay you would use it to alternate between a high and low beam

    Changeover_relay.png

    high beam on 87 low on 87A power through another relay or switch coming in on pin 30 to turn the lights on and off.


    to achieve what I think you're trying to do you need a twin output relay (basically it has 2 pin 87 terminals usually 87 and 87b)

    Relay_with_twin_output.png
    Dave

    "In a Landrover the other vehicle is your crumple zone."

    For spelling call Rogets, for mechanicing call me.

    Fozzy, 2.25D SIII Ex DCA Ute
    Tdi autoManual d1 (gave it to the Mupion)
    Archaeoptersix 1990 6x6 dual cab(This things staying)


    If you've benefited from one or more of my posts please remember, your taxes paid for my skill sets, I'm just trying to make sure you get your monies worth.
    If you think you're in front on the deal, pay it forwards.

  6. #16
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    Negative battery terminal would’ve at the same potential as the bonnet so the current flowing through the screw would be minimal.
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  7. #17
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    Quote Originally Posted by Blknight.aus View Post
    youve made a self resetting relay.

    the power is coming through the switched side of the relay to drive the signal side of the relay...

    when the power comes on the relay tries to pull over, when the relay pulls over the power is cut (87a is NC to 30) so the relay relaxes, when the relay relaxes the contacts close the power comes on and when the power comes on.........

    (add a small capacitor across the coil and you can make a pulse generator to fire an ignition coil)
    Hello Dave,

    So I go back to the 87 output that taps into a common wire to the low beam for one relay

    The second relay is for high beam circuit.

    I got both examples of wiring off the internet specifically for Bosch style 5 pins plugs. Each circuit appeared on different author's pages.

    I thought one circuit cuts into the pre-existing dicky system: the no 87a pin circuit

    While the using 87 to power the left light and 87A to power the right light meant I could use brand new wires that did not have any joints in it. All done independent of the old wiring.



    Kind regards
    Lionel

  8. #18
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    Quote Originally Posted by Lionelgee View Post
    Hello Dave,

    So I go back to the 87 output that taps into a common wire to the low beam for one relay

    The second relay is for high beam circuit.

    I got both examples of wiring off the internet specifically for Bosch style 5 pins plugs. Each circuit appeared on different author's pages.

    I thought one circuit cuts into the pre-existing dicky system: the no 87a pin circuit

    While the using 87 to power the left light and 87A to power the right light meant I could use brand new wires that did not have any joints in it. All done independent of the old wiring.



    Kind regards
    Lionel

    from your description, you've pinned up for having twin out puts (one for left one for right) and are just trying to turn on the relay to turn on both left and right filiments of high or low beam with one relay.

    that will work fine with a change over relay untill you get a bad earth and then the relay becomes self energising (or de energising depending on which way and where the earth failed)

    bet if you tied both the wires for each sides relevant filament to a single pin 87 on each relay while powering up from 30, earthing to a solid earth (not your fuse block termnial) that is carrying potential from both the headlight and the battery) from pin 85 (signal power comes in on 86, double check this its been a while but its only relevant if you're using relays with blocking diodes, bleeds, internal voltage sensing or internal LED indicators) to the battery(ies) (and no Im not going into the specifics of current flow versus voltage potential here, just make sure all the earths are good and tied together)

    oh and check my first post for the edit.
    Dave

    "In a Landrover the other vehicle is your crumple zone."

    For spelling call Rogets, for mechanicing call me.

    Fozzy, 2.25D SIII Ex DCA Ute
    Tdi autoManual d1 (gave it to the Mupion)
    Archaeoptersix 1990 6x6 dual cab(This things staying)


    If you've benefited from one or more of my posts please remember, your taxes paid for my skill sets, I'm just trying to make sure you get your monies worth.
    If you think you're in front on the deal, pay it forwards.

  9. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by workingonit View Post
    Battery terminal too close to but not quite touching steel bonnet, enough to start a welding arc and when enough metal migrated welded the bonnet to the metal battery terminal bolt. Flat battery and bonnet that wouldn't open without a lot of force. Diesel engine...petrol engine with fumes might have meant a vehicle fire.
    Dreaming

  10. #20
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    Quote Originally Posted by Blknight.aus View Post
    from your description, you've pinned up for having twin out puts (one for left one for right) and are just trying to turn on the relay to turn on both left and right filiments of high or low beam with one relay.

    that will work fine with a change over relay untill you get a bad earth and then the relay becomes self energising (or de energising depending on which way and where the earth failed)

    bet if you tied both the wires for each sides relevant filament to a single pin 87 on each relay while powering up from 30, earthing to a solid earth (not your fuse block termnial) that is carrying potential from both the headlight and the battery) from pin 85 (signal power comes in on 86, double check this its been a while but its only relevant if you're using relays with blocking diodes, bleeds, internal voltage sensing or internal LED indicators) to the battery(ies) (and no Im not going into the specifics of current flow versus voltage potential here, just make sure all the earths are good and tied together)

    oh and check my first post for the edit.
    Hello Dave,

    Bad Earth.... Hmmm I ran two new earth cables for the relays. Then I made a new earth-point and bolted the leads to bare metal. Then gave it a coat of rust prevention paint

    However I used the original earth wire off the old loom for the headlight socket. I have new headlight sockets as the old ones were disintegrating in my hands. I thought that the new headlamp sockets would fix any connection issues. I was obviously wrong about the Earth side of that idea!

    Looks like I will be running some nice thick new earth wires and making a new earth point for for each headlight. Gee a 1970's wiring system is compromised. Who would of thunk it!

    It's 10:30 pm... I have been advised that I am not going to go out with a torch and try in fix the circuit tonight. Apparently - I have been told - that it can wait until morning.

    ================================================== ===========================================
    The plan for tomorrow is:

    I will replace the wires that connects (1) each light's low beam & (2) each light's high beam. These wires are marked as "original" in the circuit drawing shown as an attachment.

    The low beam connection wire will be powered by tapping in the Output from Pin 87 from one relay.

    Then Pin 87 on the other relay will be used to provide power to the high beams.

    Plus of course each headlight socket will have its own earth running to its own earth point (just like it shows in the circuit diagram).

    The 87A pin will not be used on either relay.

    Tomorrow.

    ================================================== ===============================

    Dave would you take the feed for Terminal 30 straight from a connector on the positive terminal of the battery.

    Or take the feed for Pin 30 off the fused connector box that I newly installed?

    Kind regards
    Lionel
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