I've been up too long and I just can't think straight, so perhaps not the best time to be looking at my dash wiring, but.....
I've got illuminated switches for main beam and fog (as per left hand pic from VWP below)
They have 3 connections lets say a, b, c.
I've checked with a meter and b and c are permanently linked. So naturally a is switched to both when switched.
Any clues as to how this should be wired?
Presumably feed to a then return to b. So whats the use of c?
I've not stuck it on 12v yet but I presume that the light will light with just a and b connected and the switch on, but perhaps not.
Any clues?
ta
Chris
I'd have expected the live in for the switch, live out from switch and maybe an earth from the lamp. Or live in for switch, live in for lamp and common out? Or earth for lamp and live from switch out, with live for switch in. Or something else I haven't though of!
I did consider
a = live in
b = live out
c = -ve (ground)
so that the light has a ground for when the live out is on. But the light would ground through the live out and live in anyway, same as the actual
light would.
Although perhaps that would dim both lights?
What I have realised is that whatever these 3 connections are for, they are fine for the fogs, but the main beam needs 2 "on" positions, one
for the headlight and the other for the main beam.
Bum
At a guess...
a - +ve feed
b - +ve switched out to heads
c - earth (chassis, -ve)
You may be seeing continuity b - c through the low resistance filament of the internal lamp.
quote:
Originally posted by Macbeast
At a guess...
a - +ve feed
b - +ve switched out to heads
c - earth (chassis, -ve)
You may be seeing continuity b - c through the low resistance filament of the internal lamp.
Your headlamp, or whatever, is connected between the switched 12V and earth, so the current runs through the switch through the bulb and down to
earth.
An indicator lamp should be connected in parallel with the main bulb, ie between the switched output and earth as above.
It is not earthed through the main bulb - that would be a series connection, not parallel, - and the indicator lamp would light but the main bulb
would be starved.
If you connect two similar 12V bulbs in series you would get just 6V across each and the bulbs would be dim.
Hope this helps - well it doesn't help with the main/dip problem where I think you might have to have two switches (or a 3-way switch ) and two
separate indicator lights
quote:
Originally posted by the_fbi
I've checked with a meter and b and c are permanently linked.
quote:
Originally posted by the_fbi
I considered this, but why isn't the switch's light just inline with a or b anyway? It doesn't need an earth as it'll earth back through the main light anway.
quote:
Originally posted by Macbeast
It is not earthed through the main bulb - that would be a series connection, not parallel, - and the indicator lamp would light but the main bulb would be starved.
If you connect two similar 12V bulbs in series you would get just 6V across each and the bulbs would be dim.
Hope this helps - well it doesn't help with the main/dip problem where I think you might have to have two switches (or a 3-way switch ) and two separate indicator lights