Where is that?
WheelerWhere is that?
Maybe put it back in?I did a half ass search for this problem but maybe someone with more knowledge on wiring on a 1990 can chime in. Seems half my fuse panel is out, the radio is out and a lot of the open spaces I have tapped in to power other misc. stuff. Nothing critical is out, lights, fuel pump, etc etc all work. Probably something easy and I'm dumb. Any suggestions?
What is the issue you are having?I have power on the other side of the fusible link after the firewall junctionWithout looking at a circuit diagram I'd guess fusible link at the starter or at the junction on the firewall.
Is that the braided one toward the passenger side of the firewall?What about the cab ground? I had a weird issue with stuff in the cab intermittently losing power, like the stereo. One day I happened to notice the bolt holding the ground for the cab was loose, problem solved after that was tightened up.
There is also a six way ground buss connection under the dash by the parking brake.
Some more things to try, thank you!This might help. Looks like power comes from the starter to the junction block on the firewall then over to the bulkhead. From there it goes to the ignition switch and to the fuse panel depending on if it's a battery feed or an ignition or acc feed. Problem could be in the bulkhead connector or the fuse panel or the ignition switch. Gotta test with a test light or meter for starters. Might need to load test circuits also. I use a "test light" made out of a high beam halogen headlight. It puts enough of a load on a circuit to tell you whether it will hold a load or has a bad spot. Sometimes a regular test light or meter will show voltage but when a load is applied the circuit will go open. That is where the high beam test light comes in handy because it will load the circuit. There is more to those feed circuits I just highlighted the basics of them.
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Great, thank you for this!Just build a big test light. I have a dual beam but am only using the ground and high beam terminals. Mine has adapters for it so I can load test any kind of circuit. If you are just doing power and ground testing you just need alligator clips or something on it. Make your leads 4-5' long. If testing a power then hook it up just like you would with a test light. This just puts like a 5-10 amp load on the circuit and makes sure it can hold it. You can even hook it up and then go and wiggle your harness to see if it flickers if you suspect a bad spot. To do ground circuits you hook the power to a battery source and the ground to your circuit and use it backwards basically.
A normal test light or meter can give you a false good reading if only one strand is making connection on a circuit, this way loads it so you can tell if it's actually good or not.
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