Loom switch over nonsense!
Posted: Mon Sep 30, 2019 6:09 pm
Hi folks.
Yesterday my wife left the the stereo on when she parked up meaning the battery had gone flat. A bit of an annoyance, but hey ho.
On my old Bongo i fitted a loom swap and then removed the stereo feed as it was annoying me having to remember to turn it off when getting out.
The new van already has a loom swap, so i went to remove the wire and replace the fuse, only to find that the interior lights weren't affected by fuse 1.
For some reason, fuse 8 is the wire connected to the interior lights. So they would only go on when the ignition is on, which of course is not ideal.
Had a look behind the fuse box, took the trim off under the steering wheel and can't see anywhere that it would have been spliced in to to swap over.
So what has gone on here? I can't think how it would've found a circuit via the other fuse. I can kind of understand if there was a fault in fuse 1 and it was finding a way through completing the circuit elsewhere. But the stereo memory (permanent live) works on fuse 1 fine, so not really an issue there. I did disconnect the stereo to see if that was causing any issues, but didn't make any difference.
Any thoughts are greatly appreciated.
Yesterday my wife left the the stereo on when she parked up meaning the battery had gone flat. A bit of an annoyance, but hey ho.
On my old Bongo i fitted a loom swap and then removed the stereo feed as it was annoying me having to remember to turn it off when getting out.
The new van already has a loom swap, so i went to remove the wire and replace the fuse, only to find that the interior lights weren't affected by fuse 1.
For some reason, fuse 8 is the wire connected to the interior lights. So they would only go on when the ignition is on, which of course is not ideal.
Had a look behind the fuse box, took the trim off under the steering wheel and can't see anywhere that it would have been spliced in to to swap over.
So what has gone on here? I can't think how it would've found a circuit via the other fuse. I can kind of understand if there was a fault in fuse 1 and it was finding a way through completing the circuit elsewhere. But the stereo memory (permanent live) works on fuse 1 fine, so not really an issue there. I did disconnect the stereo to see if that was causing any issues, but didn't make any difference.
Any thoughts are greatly appreciated.