
Originally Posted by
cjc_td5
That was my gut feeling also but how come the wiring circuit on the Narva packaging is as follows?
Surely using your analogy that would mean that the LED globe would take all of the current and the resistor none?
OK I think I understand that...
If I just fitted the resistor straight to ground, then it would work whenever the indicators were used regardless of whether a trailer was connected, therefore invoking the D4 trailer modes etc. when there was no trailer connected.
A switching mechanism is required to avoid the vehicle thinking there is a trailer connected all of the time. The "off the shelf" modules use a manual switch, which I am trying to design around as I know I will either forget to switch it on off all of the time, which will annoy me.
Graemes statement and the nava diagram are correct. What you are over looking is that the LED light array("globe") does not present the same electrical characteristics as an ordinary cable. Cable = low resistance (very) and the LED Array= high resistance(therefore low current draw). what you need to do is put the resistor across the terminals of the array(per nava pic) to provide an additional (not alternate) low resistance path for current to flow through. Current will take both paths (hence parallel), small current through LEDs and and high current through the resistor. With the resistor allowing higher current flow the car now sees the trailer.
In your option 1, all the current still needs to go through the high resistance LEDs thus not changing the nature of the circuit and the fact that the resistor is placed in parallel with wire means that you are effectively joining the two ends of the resistor together so no current will flow through it - which was Graemes point.
With respect, if you don't understand these basics then do yourself a favour and get a pulse buster if you want something in car that you can switch on and off.
Cheers,
Sean
“Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former.” - Albert Einstein
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