Electrical shorts and problems are a real headache and can eat up lots of time and money trying to trace. I had a hell of a time finding this one... so I thought I would post this thread up.
I was repeatedly, but inconsistently blowing fuse #21 (7.5 amp). This fuse powers the dome lights, glove box light, glove box flash light charger, stock radio memory (I think), OBC, tachometer, economy gauge, and trunk light... I think that covers them all.
My fuses looked as though they were heating up and warping to finally break the s-curve on the fuse INSTEAD OF the typical sharp cut I am used to seeing on blown fuses. I was advised that this type of symptom is usually a weak, weak short.
This short was indeed the smallest imaginable grounding-out of a power wire I could imagine and took 6 YEARS to occur. Culprit: the metal locking sleeve around my aftermarket stereo. The factory wiring harness to the LEFT of the stereo finally vibrated on the stereo sleeve hard enough to just nudge through both the factory wiring loom tape and the insulation on one hot wire. This was indeed a TINY connection being made; it was hard to duplicate even with the center consoles and some dash components torn open and me agitating all the wires.
Solution: tie-wrap the rubbing harness to something behind the dash to keep it just out of harm's way.
Hope this helps!... I know a lot of us have aftermarket stereo systems, so I figured this was worth a share. Thanks for reading. Please post your issues from both failing factory wiring and problems caused by common mods and changes you have made to your electrical system. Thank you.
I was repeatedly, but inconsistently blowing fuse #21 (7.5 amp). This fuse powers the dome lights, glove box light, glove box flash light charger, stock radio memory (I think), OBC, tachometer, economy gauge, and trunk light... I think that covers them all.
My fuses looked as though they were heating up and warping to finally break the s-curve on the fuse INSTEAD OF the typical sharp cut I am used to seeing on blown fuses. I was advised that this type of symptom is usually a weak, weak short.
This short was indeed the smallest imaginable grounding-out of a power wire I could imagine and took 6 YEARS to occur. Culprit: the metal locking sleeve around my aftermarket stereo. The factory wiring harness to the LEFT of the stereo finally vibrated on the stereo sleeve hard enough to just nudge through both the factory wiring loom tape and the insulation on one hot wire. This was indeed a TINY connection being made; it was hard to duplicate even with the center consoles and some dash components torn open and me agitating all the wires.
Solution: tie-wrap the rubbing harness to something behind the dash to keep it just out of harm's way.
Hope this helps!... I know a lot of us have aftermarket stereo systems, so I figured this was worth a share. Thanks for reading. Please post your issues from both failing factory wiring and problems caused by common mods and changes you have made to your electrical system. Thank you.
Comment