I have owned my 1967 Barracuda Formula S convertible for almost 40 years. I bought it from the original owner in 1987. After repairing the convertible top switch twice, and replacement switches being somewhat hard to come by, I decided to put my convertible top on relays. I wanted an improvement that was 100% reversible. The pictures aren’t the best, it’s tough get up behind the dash, take pics and be able to show things clearly, but hopefully you get the idea.
I removed the seat to make sure I could reach up behind the dash and have plenty of mobility to work. I removed the left kick panel, pulled out the insulation card and found a place to mount my relay board. There was even an existing hole, so I just found a self-tapping screw and used that to mount my relay board.
I made a template out of cardboard, transferred the pattern to a scrap of ¼” plastic I had laying around. I laid out my relay sockets and 30amp circuit breaker on the board, marked and drilled the holes.
I mounted my relay sockets and circuit breaker to the board and drilled a hole in the middle for mounting with my self-tapping screw. Following the colors already in the car (yellow is top down, brown is top up) I soldered the pigtails onto the terminals and inserted them into the bottom of the relay sockets.
I left the wires long enough to do a test mount and determine how long each wire should be. I temporally mounted the relay board under the dash in the final location. I determined how long each wire needed to be before trimming the wires and soldering on the appropriate connectors to keep this installation completely plug and play.
With the board complete and mounted, I needed to find a place in the fusebox for 12V (key off) hot as my trigger connection. (This is where the pics get a little difficult) I connected to the fuse box piggybacked onto the cigar lighter, ran that (red) wire out to the top switch, plugged in my trigger wires to the switch and the high amperage feed wires to the wiring harness which leads to the back of the car and the top motor.
In the last picture you can see the two heavy wires (brown and yellow) at the top left plugged into the harness connector that leads to the top motor behind the back seat. You can also see the trigger wires at the bottom of the picture (same colors brown and yellow) that lead over to the appropriate terminals in the convertible top switch. The big red wire in the middle is the original power feed wire coming from the ammeter stud which I used to feed power to my circuit breaker. The relays work perfectly and I will not have to be concerned with the convertible top motor current running through a switch that is becoming increasingly difficult to replace.
I removed the seat to make sure I could reach up behind the dash and have plenty of mobility to work. I removed the left kick panel, pulled out the insulation card and found a place to mount my relay board. There was even an existing hole, so I just found a self-tapping screw and used that to mount my relay board.
I made a template out of cardboard, transferred the pattern to a scrap of ¼” plastic I had laying around. I laid out my relay sockets and 30amp circuit breaker on the board, marked and drilled the holes.
I mounted my relay sockets and circuit breaker to the board and drilled a hole in the middle for mounting with my self-tapping screw. Following the colors already in the car (yellow is top down, brown is top up) I soldered the pigtails onto the terminals and inserted them into the bottom of the relay sockets.
I left the wires long enough to do a test mount and determine how long each wire should be. I temporally mounted the relay board under the dash in the final location. I determined how long each wire needed to be before trimming the wires and soldering on the appropriate connectors to keep this installation completely plug and play.
With the board complete and mounted, I needed to find a place in the fusebox for 12V (key off) hot as my trigger connection. (This is where the pics get a little difficult) I connected to the fuse box piggybacked onto the cigar lighter, ran that (red) wire out to the top switch, plugged in my trigger wires to the switch and the high amperage feed wires to the wiring harness which leads to the back of the car and the top motor.
In the last picture you can see the two heavy wires (brown and yellow) at the top left plugged into the harness connector that leads to the top motor behind the back seat. You can also see the trigger wires at the bottom of the picture (same colors brown and yellow) that lead over to the appropriate terminals in the convertible top switch. The big red wire in the middle is the original power feed wire coming from the ammeter stud which I used to feed power to my circuit breaker. The relays work perfectly and I will not have to be concerned with the convertible top motor current running through a switch that is becoming increasingly difficult to replace.















