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When you begin caring for an older car, do you often find a lot of "creativity" in the lamp wiring?
My wiring diagram shows most of the leads on the lamps are correct (per color code), but a few inches from the lamp many of those leads are spliced to "incorrect" wiring (per
color code) which is later spliced to another "incorrect" color wire.
For instance ... the green/white from the engine bay harness (passenger side) is spliced to a separate solid green just next to the carbs, which is spliced to a solid red, which runs to the front right turn signal light. Per the chart the entire run should be green/white.
Also in the engine bay harness (passenger side) there's a pair of green/white lines terminating at the base of an empty female socket in the engine bay; there's no male line plugged in there at all. However, there are two green/white lines, also coming from the harness, with wirecaps on each. Temporarily patching either of the two loose green/white lines to the empty paired green/white connector results in the turn signal lamps going full on when the ignition is on. (So I quickly disconnected that!). Temporarily patching the two capped green/white lines together caused all four turn signals to flash whether the steering column switch is on left or right.
The left rear turn signal light is fed by a green/red wire which is patched to a green/white line in the boot harness, which is patched to a red/black line with a solid green two inch wire patched in the middle of it ... etc. etc.
So the question is:
As all the exterior lights actually do work correctly, except for the right rear turn signal (lamp tests ok but never flashes), is this "mix-match" of wiring something I should just shrug my shoulders at? Or is it something that needs total overhaul? A bit of the "patch and live with it" versus "rip it all out and start over" dilemma. I can't find a reference to wiring *colors* in the Judging Manual.
Thanks.
Tom
My wiring diagram shows most of the leads on the lamps are correct (per color code), but a few inches from the lamp many of those leads are spliced to "incorrect" wiring (per
color code) which is later spliced to another "incorrect" color wire.
For instance ... the green/white from the engine bay harness (passenger side) is spliced to a separate solid green just next to the carbs, which is spliced to a solid red, which runs to the front right turn signal light. Per the chart the entire run should be green/white.
Also in the engine bay harness (passenger side) there's a pair of green/white lines terminating at the base of an empty female socket in the engine bay; there's no male line plugged in there at all. However, there are two green/white lines, also coming from the harness, with wirecaps on each. Temporarily patching either of the two loose green/white lines to the empty paired green/white connector results in the turn signal lamps going full on when the ignition is on. (So I quickly disconnected that!). Temporarily patching the two capped green/white lines together caused all four turn signals to flash whether the steering column switch is on left or right.
The left rear turn signal light is fed by a green/red wire which is patched to a green/white line in the boot harness, which is patched to a red/black line with a solid green two inch wire patched in the middle of it ... etc. etc.
So the question is:
As all the exterior lights actually do work correctly, except for the right rear turn signal (lamp tests ok but never flashes), is this "mix-match" of wiring something I should just shrug my shoulders at? Or is it something that needs total overhaul? A bit of the "patch and live with it" versus "rip it all out and start over" dilemma. I can't find a reference to wiring *colors* in the Judging Manual.
Thanks.
Tom
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smilie in place of the real @
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