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Fuse panel replacement

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manny
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Fuse panel replacement

Postby manny » 04 Jan 2012 06:53

good day all,

i have seen topics on the above, and understand that the original (12) fuse panel is crimped to the loom, i want to change to a blade type panel, but intend to use a second hand panel etc, has anyone used a second hand fuse panel from a salvage car, and with some dexterity is it possible to carry out without removing the dash?

cheers


Manny


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supercass
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Postby supercass » 04 Jan 2012 16:09

[<font size="1">quote]<i>Originally posted by manny</i>

good day all,

i have seen topics on the above, and understand that the original (12) fuse panel is crimped to the loom, i want to change to a blade type panel, but intend to use a second hand panel etc, has anyone used a second hand fuse panel from a salvage car, and with some dexterity is it possible to carry out without removing the dash?

cheers</font id="size1">


I'm curious as to why you should want to do this.

moestr7v8
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Postby moestr7v8 » 04 Jan 2012 19:07

The difficulty of obtaining the correct size glass fuses for one and two the blade type are probably easier to use and more reliable,we have been giving this some thought for a while now and have purchased a new blade fuse box from Wiring Products hopefully to fit it in the engine bay possibly to the bulkhead now that the battery is in the boot of the V8.
Cheers
Moe

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Beans
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Postby Beans » 04 Jan 2012 19:28

I bought a few packs of fuses over 20 years ago.
And since I am a frugal Dutchy I never change a fuse unless it's blown [:D]
Till date only used two ...

So as they are still available online I wouldn't bother.
Unless you like the challenge of it of course [;)]

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manny
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Postby manny » 04 Jan 2012 21:09

owning a tr7 is a challenge....just wandered as you can also get reset fuses , similar to RCD that simply trip and can be reset...also as i have access to a few honda spares, including relay box, connectors etc

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moestr7v8
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Postby moestr7v8 » 04 Jan 2012 21:11

Hi Beans problem I had the last time I bought the fuses about 8 years ago now was the only ones I could get hold of were made in China and they were to long[:(] a right pain in a**e ha ha[8D]
I must admit since the problem of a dodgy fuse holder was sorted by bypassing the fuse board with an external fuse I have not changed a fuse since so maybe you are right.[}:)]
Cheers
Moe

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Postby Neil_W » 04 Jan 2012 22:31

I purchased a pack of glass fuses from this guy - fitted ok & plenty of spares now but never needed any since.

cheap if you know what I mean even to try.

http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/PACK-24-MIXED ... 2eaf78bc7d

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Postby Odd » 05 Jan 2012 11:19

That's a good price,
and 30 mm (1 5/32" or ~29.4mm to be exact) is the correct length
for our 1/4" diameter Lucas type fuse holders.

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Postby busheytrader » 06 Jan 2012 16:45

<blockquote id="quote"><font size="1" face="Century Gothic, Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"><i>Originally posted by manny</i>

good day all,

.......with some dexterity is it possible to carry out without removing the dash?
cheers
Manny
<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></font id="quote"></blockquote id="quote">

probably but it would be one of those fold down the hood, head in the footwell and legs in the air moments. IIRC undo a couple of screws and the fuse panel drops down a bit from behind the glovebox but I'm not entirely sure.

Adam

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manny
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Postby manny » 07 Jan 2012 19:32

hi all,

my other thought was to keep the original panel as is and create some solid cylindrical fuse bars to replace the glass ones, and then off this solder some blade fuse holders. Sophisticated pic attached, this would avoid any wires to be cut and easy to reinstate back to original.
[img]"C:\Documents%20and%20Settings\sangherar\My%20Documents\My%20Pictures\blade.bmp"[/img]

still 50/50 on whether to change original setup



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FI Spyder
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Postby FI Spyder » 07 Jan 2012 21:03

No sense changing to a blade type if yours is working. Get extra fuse sizes from UK supplier that you might need. You should seldom need to replace a fuse unless you have a short. I have one cracked fuse holder but it still works. I got a used fuse panel for not much on a parts order from Robsport I believe it was (for when mine actually starts acting up). If you are removing a fuse to check or replace I would give it a dab of crazy glue at the glass/metal edge as they can come apart if really old. It's a lot of work to change a panel just because someday sometime in the future you might blow a fuse and you would like it to be easy to change a fuse or be able to go into any N/A auto supply store and pick one up. I have yet to blow a fuse in any of my cars even though in the Toyota the headlight bulb was arcing to the connector and was burning out the bulb every 6 months. Ended up getting a new connector from auto wreckers.

I wouldn't want to try replacing fuse panel without removing dash. If you do remove dash it gives you an excuse to clean/oil/tighten heater levers, check/clean/lube instrument cluster, check condition of all crimped wires/connections of wires along consul, solder crimped wires for more reliability, etc. etc. make a winter works project out of it.



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manny
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Postby manny » 08 Jan 2012 06:56

thanks all,

i think i will keep it as it is based on your comments, i was possibly overestimating the failure rate of the electrics to fuses, when it looks as if good grounding is priority..

Cheers

Manny

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FI Spyder
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Postby FI Spyder » 08 Jan 2012 15:24

<blockquote id="quote"><font size="1" face="Century Gothic, Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"><i>Originally posted by manny</i>

thanks all,

i think i will keep it as it is based on your comments, i was possibly overestimating the failure rate of the electrics to fuses, when it looks as if good grounding is priority.
<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></font id="quote"></blockquote id="quote">

There are about seven ground points on the newer cars (less on the older ones) but getting a good ground to complete the circuit is only part of the battle. The other is getting the electricity to the device. That means cleaning any connection the electricity takes on the way to the device (so you get 12V at the device). When a wire carrying the electricity to a device contacts a ground point (like when the insulation wears through so the wire contacts grounded metal) you get a path for the electricity with virtually no resistance so amperage increases and a fuse blows. If there is flexing of a wire it will eventually harden and break preventing the electricity reaching the device. While this can happen anywhere it is commonly at crimped connectors and soldering crimped connectors reinforces this area minimizing this possibility. Paying attention to where wires pass near sharp edges can lessen the possibility of insulation break down. The more diligent the attention to these areas the more the reliability of the car when you're a thousand + miles from home (not a possibility on Great Britain).[:p]

Here endeth the lesson.


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