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stop light fuse box problem.


nismospek

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Well I finally got my car on the road and got it inspected yesterday. I my way back i stopped by whataburger and smoke started coming from my fuse box.

I found out that the right prong on the stop light had started to melt.

Today i went and removed a old stereo that didn't work and the associated wires. I also removed a hitch wireing harness that had been attached to the rear brake lights. I made sure that what ever was grounded stayed that way.

Went through the fuse box to make sure the right fuses where in the right place.

Once i add a fuse it still continues to heat when ever i press the brake pedal.

It heats up pretty fast too about 5-10 seconds.

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i had a similar problem; these fuse boxes are common areas of anguish :)

anyway, it turned out that the heat was caused by resistance in the connector. i flipped over the fuse box, cleaned all of the connectors, and soldered the junction point of the fuse connector (if that makes any sense to you)

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Contact zsonthebrain he builds a wiring up grade that takes the amp load away from the fuse block and puts it in a relay . It will save the combo switch as well as cause the dash lights and tail lights to be brighter. It is a simple plug in connect it up modification. The combo switch has become a vary expensive item now because of the short comings of the OEM wiring that is now 35 yrs old. It is important to check and clean all the contacts for the tail lights and marker lights as well. Corrosion causes high resistance which in turn heat. Dave also builds the headlight wiring upgrade as well as the part used to switch from a external regulated alternator to a later model internal regulated one . Do a search and you will find a ton of info. on this . Gary

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tried the soldering thing, i suck at soldering but was able to solder the small round part to the larger square part, still heats up really fast. I removed my fuse box to take pictures. Ill try uploading them today.

The other problem is I made the wife a promise i wouldn't spend any more money on this car for the rest of the year. It is really disappointing that after spending so much to get all the mechanical things in order the wireing goes bad.

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I'm not convinced that the fusebox itself is the root cause, considering how suddenly the problem cropped up. I suspect a short somewhere between the brake light switch and the brake lights. It can be a pain to track these down, as the brake light circuit is routed through both the hazard and turn signal switches on it's way to the rear.

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