• Hey Guest!
    British Car Forum has been supporting enthusiasts for over 25 years by providing a great place to share our love for British cars. You can support our efforts by upgrading your membership for less than the dues of most car clubs. There are some perks with a member upgrade!

    **Upgrade Now**
    (PS: Upgraded members don't see this banner, nor will you see the Google ads that appear on the site.)
Tips
Tips

Ammeter and Fog Lamp Switch Location

MikeAH100M

Jedi Hopeful
Silver
Country flag
Offline
My 56 100M came with an old ammeter in parts box. In addition, a friend got me a set of old Lucas rangefinder fog lamps/driving lights at the Goodwood Autojumble. My question, where would the meter and lamp switch normally be located on the dash? I believe the ammeter was a factory option on some AH's but not sure about driving lights.

The back of the dash that came with the car has a number of repairs to it - three holes that could be switches across the top middle and one large patch that could be a hole for a gauge close to the passenger side handle. The dash was not in the car when I got it so not sure if its original or not, thought it had some Reno Red paint on it which was the original top two-tone color.
 
Hi Mike, it sounds like the holes in your dash are what might typically be found when someone has either added or subtracted some items. Here is what I did with mine. Hope the pics comes thru.
Dave.
 

Attachments

  • Copy of DSCF2066.JPG
    Copy of DSCF2066.JPG
    98 KB · Views: 146
Thanks Dave. Nice looking, well sorted dash. I see that you have 2 gauges added - voltmeter and ammeter?
 
Yeh Mike, 2 gauges, Volts & Amps. Did it just for the heck of it. I'm not very concerned with the High amperage wire coming into the cockpit for the amp gauge. Ya know a high amperage wire has to go somewhere in any charging system and you should certainly make good connections no matter where you run a wire. I went to an alternator and the distance from the original regulator location to the amp gauge only adds about 2 feet of wire. I added a jumper across my amp meter terminals just in case the gauge would burn out sometime so that the circuit would not open. I have had an amp meter in my 1970 Vette for the last 30 years, have never touched it or moved the connections and it still works fine. But I also agree that an Amp meter is not necessary. If you have a volt meter and it reads less than 12volts, you know you have a problem. If you have devices on and the voltmeter doesn't show at least something above 12 volts you know you have a problem. Dave.
 
Back
Top