- Joined
- Dec 17, 2012
- Messages
- 42
- Reaction score
- 1
- Location
- Dallas, TX
- My Car
- 1973 Mustang Mach 1
Bright Red
I'm looking for any recommendations from anyone who might have been in a similar situation.
I recently got my car back from the shop after having new wiring installed throughout. When trying to install the center gauges and realized that the circuit they are on blows a fuse when turning the ignition key. To arrive at this conclusion, below are the order of recent work/diagnosis after picking up the car:
I recently got my car back from the shop after having new wiring installed throughout. When trying to install the center gauges and realized that the circuit they are on blows a fuse when turning the ignition key. To arrive at this conclusion, below are the order of recent work/diagnosis after picking up the car:
- Put in a new radiator & thermostat. After installation, ran the engine for a bit to get it up to temp and make sure the radiator wasn't leaking and thermostat was opening to allow coolant flow. During this test, I heard a very loud high pitch whining noise coming from the alternator and just thought it was the belt slipping at the time. It went away on it's own after about 30 seconds or so. I tightened the belt after and have not heard the noise since.
- When I hooked up the temp center gauge to the new wiring, it was not functioning properly. The temp needle was just fluttering and never raised with temp.
- I checked the fuse box and found that the fuse for the circuit that center gauges are on was blown. I replaced fuse (#11) and then found that it blows every time the ignition key is turned, leading me to believe there is a short somewhere. This also happens to be the same circuit that the electric choke is run from, so that is not functioning either. I noticed the car has not been starting as quickly/effortlessly as it did in the shop or immediately after picking up over the past couple months so now I understand why--no electric choke.
- I searched all of the under dash wiring and connectors and everything seemed to be fine and could not find any shorted wiring or bad grounds. The only harness connector that eliminated the short was the ignition switch wire connector that bridges between old and new wiring--see attached photo. The wires upstream of this connector are:
- Neutral safety switch
- ignition switch accessory
- 12V ignition
- Brake light/switch
- Ground
- 12V battery
- I then shifted attention to the alternator/main 12V feed. Here I saw evidence of major resistance at the mega fuse bussbar--see attached photo of melted covers. I also noticed that the alternator output nut was loose.
- Last thing I checked is the voltage of the ignition 12v circuit and it appears to be fluctuating quite a bit, leading me to believe that there could possibly be an issue with the voltage regulator in the alternator (Wondering if maybe this is the source of the loud noise that I was hearing earlier?) Either that or my digital multimeter is struggling with the points firing on the distributor. I've heard that you really need to use analog volt meters on these old cars?
- Install a new NSS--it's on order. The shop did not replace this, but when I looked at it everything it seemed to be connected properly and since the car was starting ok didn't think it was an immediate concern. My gut says that this is likely causing the issue but won't be able to confirm until this weekend when I dig into it. The NSS is on the same circuit as the center gauges.
- Double-check all grounds.
- Try a new alternator and see if that does anything. Wondering if that loud noise I heard from the alternator was the diode going bad and now there is an issue with the voltage regulator when I turn the key?