TR3driver
Great Pumpkin - R.I.P
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Yes, the relay stays pulled in all the time the engine is running. There is really no reason a relay should not last forever in that application, since all of the wear and tear happens when it is changing state. Otherwise, it is just current flowing through a wire.
Lots of cars use fuel pump relays, although these days the relay is normally controlled by the ECU rather than the signal from the points. The one on my 95 Buick wagon has outlasted the pump now, and still works fine with over 250,000 miles on the clock.
Seems like maybe I did replace that relay once in the VW Rabbit I was given; but if so it was due to the rain water that leaked through the windshield at the bottom and down over the relay plate. The relay housing was not water-tight where the fuse contacts stuck out the top. I remember finding a used one at the junk yard, but I don't recall now if I cleaned up the original and coaxed it to work, or put in the used replacement (which was just as old, just not as corroded/contaminated).
Lots of cars use fuel pump relays, although these days the relay is normally controlled by the ECU rather than the signal from the points. The one on my 95 Buick wagon has outlasted the pump now, and still works fine with over 250,000 miles on the clock.
Seems like maybe I did replace that relay once in the VW Rabbit I was given; but if so it was due to the rain water that leaked through the windshield at the bottom and down over the relay plate. The relay housing was not water-tight where the fuse contacts stuck out the top. I remember finding a used one at the junk yard, but I don't recall now if I cleaned up the original and coaxed it to work, or put in the used replacement (which was just as old, just not as corroded/contaminated).
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smilie in place of the real @
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