adriver
Blazing Apostle
I thought I would start a thread to show how Im repairing a wiring harness.
Its a B body, but the principles would be the same.
A salvaged A body wringing harness provided donor buss bars.
The tool is made from a piece of stainless welding rod.
The buss bars are steel for spring strength to hold a fuse.
But they have some type of plating which still allows soldering.
Although not as good as brass and copper.
The fuse block had a spare hole, so I added a blade type fuse holder there for future additions.
The weak spot in this period Chrysler electrical system that all the power has to go through one blade connector on the firewall to reach the amp meter.
So that one blade connector had melted its hole in the firewall disconnect.
Actually, it was the return wire.
I had two unused holes in the firewall connector.
By splitting the circuit at the firewall disconnect (see red and black wires) it divides the current between two blade connectors.
I used a crimp sleeve and solder both on these wire.
(Total of 4)
I have done the same thing at the buss bar connection by utilizing two blade connectors instead of just the original one because of the blade design, which doesnt have a lot of contact area.
The red wire on the buss bar is for wires that are hot all the time like taillight. It is off the battery.
The black one on the buss bar is only hot when the key is on.
Normally connections are crimped for easy of assembly during manufacture.
A crimped connection provides mechanical strength and resistance to vibration.
However these become corroded.
When an electrical connection is called upon to provide current past its ability due to corrosion or insufficient size it heats up.
The heat causes more resistance and the process cascades.
Some connections cannot be saved,
On those I separate the wiring from the crimp and just solder them.
Ill post pictures of how I reuse a connector later.
Ideally, it should have both a crimp and solder.
So those that cannot be saved, it is a compromise.
On some which still appear good. I clean and add solder to ensure a good connection.
Ill be posting pictures of the engine connectors too.
Fuses, terminals, wiring, burned, crimp.
Its a B body, but the principles would be the same.
A salvaged A body wringing harness provided donor buss bars.
The tool is made from a piece of stainless welding rod.
The buss bars are steel for spring strength to hold a fuse.
But they have some type of plating which still allows soldering.
Although not as good as brass and copper.
The fuse block had a spare hole, so I added a blade type fuse holder there for future additions.
The weak spot in this period Chrysler electrical system that all the power has to go through one blade connector on the firewall to reach the amp meter.
So that one blade connector had melted its hole in the firewall disconnect.
Actually, it was the return wire.
I had two unused holes in the firewall connector.
By splitting the circuit at the firewall disconnect (see red and black wires) it divides the current between two blade connectors.
I used a crimp sleeve and solder both on these wire.
(Total of 4)
I have done the same thing at the buss bar connection by utilizing two blade connectors instead of just the original one because of the blade design, which doesnt have a lot of contact area.
The red wire on the buss bar is for wires that are hot all the time like taillight. It is off the battery.
The black one on the buss bar is only hot when the key is on.
Normally connections are crimped for easy of assembly during manufacture.
A crimped connection provides mechanical strength and resistance to vibration.
However these become corroded.
When an electrical connection is called upon to provide current past its ability due to corrosion or insufficient size it heats up.
The heat causes more resistance and the process cascades.
Some connections cannot be saved,
On those I separate the wiring from the crimp and just solder them.
Ill post pictures of how I reuse a connector later.
Ideally, it should have both a crimp and solder.
So those that cannot be saved, it is a compromise.
On some which still appear good. I clean and add solder to ensure a good connection.
Ill be posting pictures of the engine connectors too.
Fuses, terminals, wiring, burned, crimp.
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