As much as I like boating and fishing. Ain't no way I'm gonna leave sight of shore.Dave and any one else, come here and we can go out in my boat, who knows what we can catch...Can go about 500 miles on a tank of gas....
As much as I like boating and fishing. Ain't no way I'm gonna leave sight of shore.Dave and any one else, come here and we can go out in my boat, who knows what we can catch...Can go about 500 miles on a tank of gas....
Is the diagram from the Dodge Shop manual?That's what I'm confused on. Maybe I'm reading the wiring schematic wrong and missing it.
If high/low(2 headlights) they need 3 wires. if separate high and low (4 headlights) they get 2 wires each. I was just skimming the conversation, but didn't someone say some of the drawings only show the + side?Just spent 2 hours reading thru all those links and printing out the manual Mattax posted.
I still have one giant question. The headlights for example have two and three wires going into the plugs for them. But the wiring diagram for the polara that I can find shows just one. My universal kit has just one as well how the heck does one get both lights on with just one wire
Mmmm, looks good. But, you shouldn't say wiener in front of Chris. LOLSo dinner tonight was two towns away.
Restaurant 101-good,fast,cheap-pick two.
This place breaks that rule,100% of the time.
Been eating there a couple times a year for the last 20 years.
Never ever disappointed. By the food or the service.
Last year they built a food truck
And run it off their home property on the main drag through town. View attachment 1715214566Wienerschnitzel. Yum!
Throw headlight relays into the mix...Another place it can get confusing is if the switching is done on the neg side and hot is constant...
Im thinking you enjoyed yourself. Happy for ya,man. And sorry it has to end.All the fish are filleted and the fishing gear stowed for the trip home tomorrow.
It’s been a great 2 weeks. 66 snapper blue fish caught and 3 dozen keeper crabs.
I really needed this break.
Thanks...but you know, “All good things...”Im thinking you enjoyed yourself. Happy for ya,man. And sorry it has to end.
We get them in droves over here. Thousands in the fields. Not quite the hunter myself, but my neighbor has one of those machine gun paintball guns..........fun times.
You want to do it right? Pull the engine, Transmission, the seats, the carper, the dash, replace the three harnesses, then plug in everything, like the factory did. The only way to do it the correct way. Anything else is just a hack job...IMO.
Vizard flow tested a bunch of mufflers back in the 70s - published the results a few places including Performance with Economy.
Glasspacks generally flow much better going with the louvers than into them.
Vizard flow tested a bunch of mufflers back in the 70s - published the results a few places including Performance with Economy.
Glasspacks generally flow much better going with the louvers than into them.
That's because they are a straight through tube.
Chris - what you need to do is get a sheet of plywood, some good open barrel crimpers, and more than enough terminals, and connectors only as needed for the wires.
Lay out the original on one side of the board, and the generic one on the other. Then make the generic one look like the original. It can be a family project, like a jigsaw puzzle.
There's some good posts in the electrical forum about how to do this, how to make the crimps, etc.
Hardest part for you will be if there is a need for some insulation color that's not common. If there's no marine supply stores near you, you may have to order from a specialty company to avoid bying 250' spool.
A couple all doors from the Woodward Cruise.View attachment 1715214314 View attachment 1715214315
Or put in a voltmeter.
Up to 14 gauge, yeah.
and wiring is like rocket science in chinese with a german translating it
As much as I appreciate the ammeter, I don't know why they seem to have been preferred over voltmeters well into the 70s. Even the aftermarket underdash gage sets came usually came with ammeters, not voltmeters. In fact I hav etwo of those in a box in the garage. Maybe accurate voltmeters in that range were more expensive??
Sure would have been easier for Joe average to wire in a voltmeter than a ammeter to his Chevy Nova. (I added a mechanical oil pressure gage to mine)
Could be. Voltmeters aren't built much different. It's not like the manufacturers had to wait for the computer before they figured out how to make one.
As I stood looking at meters the other day at Harbor Freight I wondered which one I should get.
I've never owned one, but feel the more I do things on the cars I need one.
At least my mechanic neighbor wouldn't have to walk back to his house to get his.
Any recommendations....what it should have on it??
My favorite analog for kicking around in the tool box is a mid 80s Radio shack multi-meter.
For digital, so far I've been pretty happy Innova 3340