i was looking at the 74 wiring diagram for lighting vs. the 2800 cs / 3.0 cs (USA) and i have a question or two.
first comment - i am not great with automotive electrical - the basics sure ... i have already added the direct power to the low beams with a new relay as that is simple enough - the headlight switch sends power to the low beams. where i am going with this is trying to introduce a fog light circuit. it seems simple enough to send power from a fuse to a new switch (probably fuse #6 since it in no longer directly powering the low beams), add a ground for the new switch and once pressed, continue the power to a new relay (pin 86). of course, pin 30 would have a new fused power direct from the battery, pin 85 would go to ground and pin 87 would send power to the fogs. The new switch on the underdash panel (like the rear window defrost button). i could ignore the #15 connector and not worry about the high beams / fogs being on at the same time.
we will start with what is most common to most of us - the pre '74 diagram - #18 is the horn relay and #16 is the high beam relay (#15 is the foglight connector, which should shut off the fogs when the high beams are on) - no fog lights are shown on the diagram. here power is fed from the battery to pin 30. pin 86 ties to the dip switch (white wire) and also feeds the foglight connector (if the dip switch is activated, it would send power to the fog light connector. pin 85 ties to ground and to the program tester (#31 - brown wire) and pin 87 powers the high beams. so the question is if i wanted to be 'correct' and tie in the #15 connector ... which relay pin would it tie to? (presumably 85 on the fog light relay)
this is the 74 diagram - #16 is the horn relay and #15 is the fog light relay ... although the high beams are tied to it. the high beam / fogs use pin 30 on the relay to power the lights (red wire direct from battery). pin 86 on the 74 ties to the fog light switch, pin 85 ties to the high beams + the dip switch and pin 87 ties to the fog lights. the fog light relay is not grounded, it feeds fogs or high beams when one of the 2 switches is activated. the ground has been removed from the relay - both the fogs and the high beams are directly grounded and the program tester ground has been relocated.
the either / or approach of fogs / high beams approach in the 74 wiring seems like a more elegant way to implement fogs - UNLESS you want to be able to run all lights at the same time. so here's the part i don't understand about this relay configuration - in the 74, the default has pin 85 powered (high beam wiring) which also connects to the dip switch ... which is open unless the switch is used + powers the high beams - not sure how this works or if it would only work with the 74 switch. if the fog light switch is pressed, it energizes pin 86 an and sends power to the fog lights, turning the high beams off. if the dip switch is toggled, it cuts off power to the fogs. if neither is toggled, how does the circuit deal with the power ... i don't understand the lack of ground default. for those of you who are less electrically challenged than me, i would appreciate knowing how does this resolve itself?
first comment - i am not great with automotive electrical - the basics sure ... i have already added the direct power to the low beams with a new relay as that is simple enough - the headlight switch sends power to the low beams. where i am going with this is trying to introduce a fog light circuit. it seems simple enough to send power from a fuse to a new switch (probably fuse #6 since it in no longer directly powering the low beams), add a ground for the new switch and once pressed, continue the power to a new relay (pin 86). of course, pin 30 would have a new fused power direct from the battery, pin 85 would go to ground and pin 87 would send power to the fogs. The new switch on the underdash panel (like the rear window defrost button). i could ignore the #15 connector and not worry about the high beams / fogs being on at the same time.
we will start with what is most common to most of us - the pre '74 diagram - #18 is the horn relay and #16 is the high beam relay (#15 is the foglight connector, which should shut off the fogs when the high beams are on) - no fog lights are shown on the diagram. here power is fed from the battery to pin 30. pin 86 ties to the dip switch (white wire) and also feeds the foglight connector (if the dip switch is activated, it would send power to the fog light connector. pin 85 ties to ground and to the program tester (#31 - brown wire) and pin 87 powers the high beams. so the question is if i wanted to be 'correct' and tie in the #15 connector ... which relay pin would it tie to? (presumably 85 on the fog light relay)
this is the 74 diagram - #16 is the horn relay and #15 is the fog light relay ... although the high beams are tied to it. the high beam / fogs use pin 30 on the relay to power the lights (red wire direct from battery). pin 86 on the 74 ties to the fog light switch, pin 85 ties to the high beams + the dip switch and pin 87 ties to the fog lights. the fog light relay is not grounded, it feeds fogs or high beams when one of the 2 switches is activated. the ground has been removed from the relay - both the fogs and the high beams are directly grounded and the program tester ground has been relocated.
the either / or approach of fogs / high beams approach in the 74 wiring seems like a more elegant way to implement fogs - UNLESS you want to be able to run all lights at the same time. so here's the part i don't understand about this relay configuration - in the 74, the default has pin 85 powered (high beam wiring) which also connects to the dip switch ... which is open unless the switch is used + powers the high beams - not sure how this works or if it would only work with the 74 switch. if the fog light switch is pressed, it energizes pin 86 an and sends power to the fog lights, turning the high beams off. if the dip switch is toggled, it cuts off power to the fogs. if neither is toggled, how does the circuit deal with the power ... i don't understand the lack of ground default. for those of you who are less electrically challenged than me, i would appreciate knowing how does this resolve itself?