Will you be removing the VIN plates before sending away?
Body shop will do that. I have ordered new ones: Karmann and the fender one.Will you be removing the VIN plates before sending away?
Very Apt. Her name is Dulcinea...It will be ugly ducking (meant nicely) to swan here!
Not a stranger to transmogrifying ugly ducklings into swans... My first major restoration below (circa 2001-2004). I did this in my garage. Paint, interior, and all..It will be ugly ducking (meant nicely) to swan here!
Almost any hard ware can be fixed. In your profession, fixing wet ware is WAY more challenging.Braver man than I to see the beauty in that. Nicely done!
Sounds like a nightmare for the dealers!The dealer installed the a/c system from BMW but they didn’t design their own wiring, that was done by the factory. It must have taken the dealer quite a bit of time to install the components: evaporator box with squirrel cage fan, side panels, face plate, pipes through firewall (they may have had to drill the two holes), hoses in engine bay, condenser and fan, wiring, etc. I believe the opening for the hoses in the core support was done at the factory.
Often those prewires are done using those rectangular plastic spade couplingsScott, any thought about how you may add the additional wiring you are doing? In my case because I installed the battery in the trunk I put a distribution block in the old battery location. I have a large cable feeding that distribution block, but I’m now realizing that I may want to add a relay with power running to the distribution block controlled by that relay through the ignition switch since at the moment everything in that distribution block receives always-on battery power. You seem to be quite the wiring guy so figured I’d see see what you were planning to do. I posted a thread previously asking about any additional future wiring and am planning to perhaps run one or two wires to the fuse box area, one or two wires to the console area one or two wires to the under seat area and an extra wire back to the trunk merely for future proofing. I figure this way anything that I might choose to add whether or audio, seat heaters, etc. would already have a line from the battery power through the distribution block so that I won’t need to be tearing up any carpeting or removing the center console. Given the discussion about the label maker, it should be really easy to have AUX1, AUX 2, etc. There’s a reasonable point I may have Dan install air-conditioning in my non-AC car, so I need to figure out what wiring would be necessary to make that future job as easy as possible.
Sounds like a good approach!Thanks for the extensive write up on battery supply, didn’t mean to hijack your thread but I guess it’s all fair game. I do have a 100A fuse at the battery terminal then a heavy-duty wire heading forward to the engine bay, where I took a tip from someone else here and installed a terminal for jump starting, etc, like modern BMWs have, from there the wire splits with part going directly to the”old” wiring harness including a direct to starter with its own fuse and the other portion going to the battery tray with my distribution block. It’s this latter portion that I thought should perhaps be wired to be turned on via ignition on, since none of the accessories that come off of that block need to function when the car isn’t on. My current wiring has those as always-on, and the relays I had used previously all have tiny little 12-or 14-gauge wires to attach to the pins, which seems odd when it’s a 6 or 8-gauge cable that it’s turning on. I poked around and found some heavy duty relays with two large M6 terminals for the power in/power out and two smaller pins for the ground and lower-voltage switch, so that is likely what I’ll use, along with adding a fuse inline. I’m learning that in addition to relays to increase the effectiveness of power, fuses are useful to protect my investment in case I lose control of that power.
Ahh headlight low beam relay. Forgot about that…This makes a lot of sense. If I had it to do over again I would add a few wires in the wrapped bundle that goes through the bulkhead to allow for any future needs. I added relays up front for the AC fan, fog lights (future) and headlight low beams. The goal was to take the load off of the switches in the cabin.
Not yet. He and I have discussed this a few times, and his diagram is very nicely done. I am taking a slightly different approach based on work I did in the car industry a few years back, which addresses the harness not as much from a components and connection perspective (which is useful for diagnosing faults), but from what I call a geographic perspective (which is more useful for building a harness). You can see in my diagrams (which are a first cut at this) that I have bundled the wires in specific groups as they actually appear in the car. So, for example, the bundle that goes over the rear tire well branches off at the top of the well to feed the trunk light, speaker and defroster, the rest continue on eventually branching out to tail lamps and the fuel gauge sender. Same thing up front. I think Alprada's diagram is sort of organized this way, just not as explicitly. For example, if you follow his curvy black lines between the front and rear harnesses, we see that in the lower diagram, he has connector 66 (the cluster connector pair) located way away from connector 37, but these connectors are located inches apart under the dash. In my diagram they are next to one another.