A couple of questions. I am about to follow the steps found at the below link to turn off the service indicator lights. It states you run a jumper wire from pin 7(service lights) to pin 19(ground) on the diagnostic connector. 1. what do I use as a jumper wire? 2. where is the diagnostic connector found in the engine compartment? (pic/s would be great). Thanks
Turning Service lights off via jumper wire/diagnostic connector
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To answer question 1:
I used a piece of wire about 1/16" thick and bent it with pliers into a 'U" shape so that it would slide into both holes at once. Any single strand piece of wire will work, it needs to be sorta thick though.
Answer to question 2:
Take a look at this picture -
See in the upper left hand corner, that round plastic cap with the strap coming off the top? That's the diagnostic port.
Hope that helps, and by the way, don't worry about getting shocked or anything like that. I did it with my bare hands, no problem.
Brandon
I found a much simpler source to reset the lights. Use this instead of the one you've got
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Another way.
I read in a service manual that you only need to ground #7. I used a continuity checker and grounded it to a strut bolt. I have done this 3 or 4 times in six years and there have been no problems. I have a 318is 4 cylinder which may be different than the 6 cylinders.Comment
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Originally posted by EurospeedI need to do this, and probably replace my SI board batteries. My indicator lights are bonkers.Comment
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mine isnt resetting :( I have an early connector I did pin 7 to 1 and even tried pin 7 grounding to the manifold and nothing. all of my lights are still onComment
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It is a good idea to use a fused link instead of just a piece of wire. That way if you accidentally connect the wrong pins and ground something out, the fuse will blow instead of your wiring. A small 5 or 10 amp fuse should be fine.
Something like this:
works great because you don't even need to attach wires to the fuse. It allready has them.Comment
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It is a good idea to use a fused link instead of just a piece of wire. That way if you accidentally connect the wrong pins and ground something out, the fuse will blow instead of your wiring. A small 5 or 10 amp fuse should be fine.
Something like this:
works great because you don't even need to attach wires to the fuse. It allready has them.Comment
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Ya, they sell them.
Any of these would work:
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If you don't have a radioshack near by, any autoparts store should sell them too.
Just make sure you use a small fuse. 30Amp, like the one that comes with one of the ones in the link I posted, is too big. You'll fry stuff long before the fuse blows.Comment
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Cool. One more question; I've always wondered what you use for the ends of the wires? Do you just tin them with a solder? Or is there a good end to put on the wires?1988 325ic AutomaticComment
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