Post
by vee12eman » Tue May 30, 2017 5:28 am
Hi Sven,
I do not claim to be an expert on wiring and although I completely re-wired my car, this was ages ago. I still have some of the old looms on my shelf, but largely I cannibalised these for spare lengths of cable. I may be able to find the old loom and trace where the cable splits, but think it is long gone.
However, I will try to answer your question and cover all eventualities.
From memory and the wiring diagram, a single brown cable supplies both fan and horn relays. The cable is one of those connected to the power stud on the R/H engine frame, just above the Ignition Voltage regulator and attached by a heavy cable to the +ve battery terminal. This cable enters the loom running along the R/H engine frame and has a loop which exits, then re-enters the loom – this loop includes the fuse holder you refer too. From there, this cable goes down to the fan relays. Coming off this cable is a branch which feeds the horn relay. The joint of the branch is hidden (I think) within the loom wrapping, close to the exit point on the loom. I think this is your disconnected brown cable adjacent to the fan relay and is now replaced by the Black cable you describe. The disconnected cable may still have continuity to the fan relay connection, through the branch and joint described.
If the original cable is broken between horn relay and power stud (including the fuse holder), then the original line will be unable to supply either horn or fan relay. On the other hand, if the branch had come disconnected from the main cable (possibly hidden inside the loom wrapping), then there would still be a supply to the fan relay, but not the horn. You could fix this by unwrapping the loom and reconnecting - be sure to insulate well afterwards.
You do not say whether the fans receive power from the brown cable and fuse or from a new cable, only that the fans are switched on and off by the manual switch in the dash. This is probably connected to a different control circuit, connected to the fan relay winding connections - W1 and W2, correctly, this should of course connect to the otter switch or in your case the new Coolcat switch.
It seems the previous owner overcame a problem using the new black cable to supply the horn relay, which you say runs from relay to the fuse, indicating that the power stud to fuse section of the cable is OK. Again, I am not sure how the fans currently receive power, only that they are controlled by the dash switch. This switch presumably bypasses the thermo switch for the fans and activates the fan relay, but alternatively may supply the fans with power directly, not using a fan relay at all. The latter is pretty undesirable as the switch will not like the power draw from the fans and will likely be arcing every time it is used.
You need to isolate the cable from the power stud and any relays and find out if the fuse holder has continuity to the power stud connection (you have to disconnect or the continuity check may pass through other components). If it does, then see if the fuse holder itself is undamaged and has continuity to the (currently disconnected) brown supply to the horn relay. Also, you need to check if there is continuity from the fuse holder to where the cables exit to supply the fan relay – as I have modified my car, I am unsure of the exact location, but I think it is near the rear mounting for the bonnet gas strut. Whilst disconnected, do an insulation check by ensuring no continuity from the cable to the body/frame or other components.
If these are intact, insulation seems to be OK and the fuse holder is not corroded or damaged, you may be able to restore the wiring by re-establishing original connections, fitting the fuse and reconnecting the horn and fan relays. BUT, as I said before, be aware that the previous owner disconnected and changed the circuit for a reason and if the reason was that the brown cable had become damaged and despite your tests, due to insulation failure, is now in contact with either car body/frame or other cables, then you run the risk of shorts, sparks, melted cables and/or fire. There is a lot of current available to this brown cable, which is directly connected to the battery.
Prior to reconnecting any cables, have a good look at the loom running along the engine frame – see if any of the cables show signs of damage – either chafing or melting, if you find evidence of this, the loom should be replaced.
I suggest that if no damage is apparent, the cable from the power stud is ok and currently connected with no problems, continuity exists down to both the horn relay supply (currently disconnected) and to the supply to the fan relay, then you could fit a small fuse to the holder and test – if that blows when fitted (as opposed to when either horn or fan is operated – the small fuse should blow in any case at this point), then the loom is damaged and should be replaced – certainly it should not be used to supply horn and fans. if it passes, then refit the correct fuse and test again - keeping an eagle eye out for problems. The cable undergoes the ultimate test when the fans are operating and you operate the horn.
The key is why the previous owner modified your wiring, was it because wiring broke, or because the insulation has failed? It may even be just because one or more of the terminals is loose or otherwise making poor connection with it’s cable. Similarly, cables may begin to fail because several of the strands have broken – there may be continuity but high resistance when a large current is passed. Unfortunately the wiring in this area is subject to a lot of heat and is over 40 years old by now and accordingly brittle and/or work hardened – tread carefully!
Good Luck,
Regards,
Regards,
Simon
Series III FHC