Fixnstuff
Full Access Member
Mine melted at the power to the glow plug controller.So I ran a direct line from controller to the fender mounted solenoid. I removed the two yellow feed lines that are the way ford engineers ran power to the controller. Two lines are cheaper than one large line in the electrical industry. I used 6 gauge speaker wire purchased from an car stereo shop with heavy lugs to fit both ends.
As far as current carrying capacity you will probably get by, it may be more than you need, over kill BUT: Speaker wire is the WRONG wire to use because speaker wire uses very small strands and a larger number of strands and that is FOR THE PURPOSE OF IMPEDANCE in Speaker Circuits. I'm not an expert, I've not been employed in the electrical or electronics profession but I've been through electricians school with straight a grades and have a good understanding of the science. What I just mentioned is something that I read when I was researching the wire used in Fusible Links. That is very high purity low oxygen copper so they will all melt through at the same temperature. I learned a bit about stranded wires in the process.
Secondly the insulation on speaker wires is NOT suitable for being close to an engine in an engine compartment and subject to oils, fuels, solvents and potentially quite high temperatures.
You might get by for awhile or a long time on those counts but I would say that the insulation is going to be affected and get brittle from engine heat and along with the presence of oil, fuel and solvent fumes probably deteriorate before it would with proper wire insulation specs.
LASTLY, if you did not include fusible link or CIRCUIT BREAKER in that wire YOU could have A VERY BIG AND DANGEROUS PROBLEM in the future. If that "always hot" wire ever shorts to ground with no circuit breaker or fusible links you are likely to have a dangerous and at le4ast very damaging engine fire and likely and maybe an exploding battery or two unless the starter relay explodes into a cloud of flames and smoke first, cutting off the voltage from the batteries.
Without conforming it by looking at the circuit again I am quite sure that is what would happen.
What WOULD DO, for both of you guys who mantoned using a single Power Cable to the Glow Plug Relay, IS, INSTALL A MANUAL RESET CIRCUIT BREAKER.
I looked into this while researching how I could best repair my harness or build a new harness and the reason that I would select a MANUAL RESET circuit breaker is because an automatic reset breaker will keep resetting itself as it cools down, closing the circuit again (allowing current to flow to the dead short) each time. It will likely break the circuit immediately each time but with a Manual Reset you will have to open the hood to reset it and AT THAT TIME, you can examine the wiring to try to figure out what is causing the breaker to trip. Normally it would have to be a short somewhere along that single cable. OTHERWISE it could be a failing circuit breaker.
I really don't know without some more study of the circuit, what rating that circuit breaker needs to be. YOU DON'T want it to be too high or too low. I know it wuill be at least 50 Amps, based on the approximate rating of the original fusible links but doubling that to 100 Amps may be TOO HIGH.
Remember that the solid state controller has a LARGE Ribbon or "Z-bar" resistor on top of it which drops the voltage from 12 volts on the power side of the Glow Plug Controller Relay, down to 6 Volts that actually goes to the Glow Plugs. I THINK that resister thus lowers the current demand in the power wires that go to the Glow Plug Relay from the battery VIA the starter solenoid. It's certainly not 200 Amps as some people have suggested in old topics or those fusible links would instantly melt.
Anyway, I am too brain-fogged from pain pills to analyse this any further. (lost my concentration) that's why my posts tend to be so long. My memory is also affected so, I just HOPE that I have everything right so far.
The most important thing that I see is for those single power cable users is to INSTALL A CIRCUIT BREAKER.
I just don't know what the correct rating would be for a single cable. Someone who works with electronics circuits can probably figure it out based on the fact the the TWO power wires each have a 14 GA Fusible Link
There might be a style of circuit breaker better than a manual reset breaker, it's been a long time since I studied all of this and there are several types of circuit breakers that could be used.
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