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wndsnd |
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#1
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You wanted a horse, but got a goat. Nobody wants a goat.... ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 2,861 Joined: 12-February 12 From: North Shore, MA Member No.: 14,124 Region Association: North East States ![]() ![]() |
My fuel pump is in the front.
It is fed by the original wiring at the rear suspension point If I power the fuel pump from an auxiliary 12 volt source fed from the rear, the pump runs. That eliminates the wiring from rear to front, and the pump. If I put a meter on the pump wiring at suspension point I get a reading of hundreds of volts. How do I get Hundreds of volts from a 12 volt circuit. I am guessing a short would cause amps, not volts. I have been changing relays, and the board. I did what Dave Darling mentions and checked out the #30 at both board relays. I had constant 12 V there I changed the fuses. Car was run hard in the rain for a couple of days. I suspect water got into something but where? Relay board was covered. Everything else seems ok. Maybe it is not water. What do you guys think? It has to be somewhere between the board and the wiring at suspension point. Is there another connector between the suspension point and the board? Lots of questions..... Sorry. Thanks |
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Spoke |
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#2
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Jerry ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 7,158 Joined: 29-October 04 From: Allentown, PA Member No.: 3,031 Region Association: None ![]() ![]() |
I assume the car won't start because the fuel pump isn't running, correct?
What type of connection do you have at the original location? Cut and spliced wire? Crimped? What fuel system do you have? Carbs? FI? If carbs do you have a jumper on pin 3 of the FI power connector? Follow the fuel pump power path starting at the 25A fuse. Measure voltage on both sides of the fuse. From there check the voltage at pin 87 of the fuel pump relay K75. You can do this by pulling the relay and inserting a very small wire in the pin 87 socket hole and replacing the relay. You may want to check the ground wire at the original location. When you measure hundreds of volts, measure each wire to chassis. For the ground wire, you should have zero volts and 12V on the other wire. Attached thumbnail(s) ![]() |
worn |
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#3
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Winner of the Utah Twisted Joint Award ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 3,470 Joined: 3-June 11 From: Madison, WI Member No.: 13,152 Region Association: Upper MidWest ![]() ![]() |
Hi Spoke,
Is it reasonable to assume some sort of inductance is creating the high voltage? Also, is it reasonable for me to copy your diagram? As for the car, I think I would ask if 12 volts is present at the relay board and whether providing 12 volts at the fuel pump relay, bypassing said relay will run the fuel pump. Then one could keep swimming upstream towards the key switch. |
Spoke |
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#4
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Jerry ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 7,158 Joined: 29-October 04 From: Allentown, PA Member No.: 3,031 Region Association: None ![]() ![]() |
Hi Spoke, Is it reasonable to assume some sort of inductance is creating the high voltage? Also, is it reasonable for me to copy your diagram? As for the car, I think I would ask if 12 volts is present at the relay board and whether providing 12 volts at the fuel pump relay, bypassing said relay will run the fuel pump. Then one could keep swimming upstream towards the key switch. The large wire coming to the relay board on pin 14 comes directly from the battery. This provides the 12V to the 25A fuse and then to the fuel pump relay. 12V power from the ignition key comes in on pin 8 and powers pin 86 of the FI power supply relay K74. Agreed the only way to get a high voltage is with inductance and changing currents. Maybe the high voltage coil packs are causing some disturbance on the relay board. |
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