So the Rambler has a new trans! so I go to drive to dinner last night, pull on the headlights -- flash -- off! A few pokes finds the 30A fuse I added has gone intermittent. Back in the yard it goes. (Untold ages ago I installed Hella halogens with relays, a 10 gauge batter feed with it's own 30 amp fuse. The antique headlight switch we all love (hate) only talks to the relays.) This was one of those molded rubber inline blade-type fuse holders with pigtails. I crimped and soldered spade lugs to it. I packed the socket with silicone grease. I don't know how old it is exactly, probably 8 - 10 years. Failing after 10 years sounds OK, until you consider that 99% of the factory 1963 electrical connections are still in perfect working order after 44 years. Those old wiring harnesses with splices inside and all that ugliness, are well-designed. So I took it to the bench and cut it open. It was spotlessly clean, no sign of heating, the spring clips just got weak. I could have squeezed it with pliers to tighten it, but I replaced it with a fusible link instead. This is the SECOND one of these that has failed. The first one was not packed with grease, and the contacts burned up. The grease really does help. (That one was in the cooling fan circuit; I'm back to mechanical fan now.) For this sort of failsafe fuse (where i'm protecting the wiring harness or battery in an accident or slip-of-the-screwdriver, and not delicate electronics) I'm switching totally to fusible links. Fusible links are just short lengths of wire generally 4 wire gauges smaller than the wiring you are protecting. There is fancy 'fusible link' insulated with that doesn't burn, but I'm just using regular PVC wire. In this case, I've got 10 gauge feeding the lighting relays, which source from a barrier strip. The fuse on the barrier strip I replaced with 2" of 20-gauge wire, crimped and soldered to spade lugs. Lessee what I can recall what else has failed electrically in this car since 1988: * Parking lamp sockets, front (electrical/water corrosion) NOTE L * Headlight switch (burned up contacts) NOTE H * Taillight sockets (electrical/water corrosion) NOTE L * Weather Eye fan motor NOTE F * Fuse-block fastons and fuse clips (can't recall which ones) NOTE K * Ignition contact points (jettisonned by 1995) * Brake light switch (repeated failures) (NOTE B) Non-factory parts: * Battery quick-disconnect (green-knob type in ground lead) NOTE Q What do they all have in common? AN ELECTRICAL CONNECTION THAT DEPENDS ON DRY METAL-TO-METAL CONTACT UNDER SPRING TENSION, either constant (fuse clips, fastons) or intermittent (headlight switch). In electronics the technical term for this is: CONNECTORS SUCK. tomj PS: Barrier strips suck too, but they suck a lot less. You can see them; you can get (good ones) tight enough to be gas-tight. They do not rely on spring tension. You can field-repair them. Good ones are nickel-plated brass, buy those, they cost more. NOTE K: Another chronic weak spot in Ramblers is the flimsy little fuse block. Cheap rivets get loose with time, increased resistance causes heating, heat causes spring clips to sprong [sprong: the opposite of spring], causing heating, ... requires creative solutions. NOTE F: Bearings and commutators, 'nuf said. NOTE L: No surprise here, moisture/condensation gets into the socket over time and electrical current corroses brass and jams the bulb into the socket. Cleaning/replacement then packing the socket with grease (of any kind) before installing the bulb is a long-term cure. NOTE H: A chronic weak part, the headlight contacts are too small, and the built-in circuit breaker gets hot. The contacts are weakly crimped in, and the fast-on connectors get loose with age, the whole thing gets REALLY HOT! and fails at inopportune times. Even replacement isn't a good fix, because the part is No Good. Relays in the headlamp circuits cures this. NOTE Q: It seems to go high-resistance/open circuit every few months, often in an odd mode where I can start the car (100 amps for a second or two) but then high resistance such that the battery fails to charge! The battery gets low, then the car won't start. If I loosen the knob then tighten it again, car starts and charges. I took it off, cleaned it spotlessly, wire-brushed it then silicone greased it. If it fails even once more it goes in the trash. NOTE B: Years ago the brake light switch failed for the first time I recall since I owned the car. I installed a replacement bought at NAPA. That lasted a year. I then went through at least two more, to the point where I carried a spare in the glovebox. I then bought an expensive unit from Ron Francis Wiring around 2002 -- no failure since then. Conclusion: aftermarket parts (in this case Echlin) are *crap*. I did a post-mortem on the most-recent Echlin switch failure and I can assure you the thing was made with garbage components and materials. _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list