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You still have to move the remaining wires... most of the wires to power everything on the vehicle get taken off at the starter. Since most of the wires at the starter have the fusible links right there at the starter you've now got to find a way to fuse those wires once you run them to a new power source.
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You just move all those wires up to the always-hot side of the new solenoid, fusible links and all. Just splice in some extensions too reach the new location and you're good to go. /forums/images/graemlins/thumb.gif
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The purpose of fusible links is to blow due to excess current. They aren't intended for individual circuit protection. Their intention is to prevent fires from shorts to ground. By adding the ~5' of wire you'd need to add (if you tore apart the engine harness and routed those wires out the back of the motor) you'd partially defeat the purpose of the fusible links. If you leave the fusible links where they are you're adding around 10' of wire and voltage drop. Now, you could use a fusible link that is the size of the sum of the individual fusible links up at the solenoid but that's adding even more cost.
Why not bite the bullet and make a nice new wire, shrink tube it, abrasive loom it, and then use the standard heat loom GM uses over all that?