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Headlights on but combo switch is hot.


LostxSoul

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Well folks, here's my first post. I've spent the last two hours trying to find an answer to my wiring issue and another 2 trying to diagnose it. So when all else fails, get some help from those who have LOTS of experience.

1977 280Z.

PO "fixed" the combination switch for the headlights. After my drive home (lights off) I realized that they didn't work. I noticed the Red wire FSM says it runs to the fuse box, I think, was off. I put my finger over it and pressed it back onto the connection and it the lights turned on. A month later I'm finally getting to the issue of soldering it back on.

I soldered the connection back together on it's pin. I turned the lights on and they work fine, out of curiosity I touched the connection and it's heating up, hotter than my finger can handle. I didn't let it sit like that for long and checked the other connections, for heat while the running lights were on. Nothing else was even hot, or warm. I double checked the connection. It's not touching any wires, housing, etc. Checked the fuse box, no burned out fuses.

I suck at electrical issues (next semester I'll be signing up for that class) but from what I can see, doesn't look like there's anything too out of the ordinary.

Recent electrical fixes are as follows.

Headlights (New, PO installed them)

Short on Black and Green ignition wire (jumped to passenger side connection before it connects to the 8 or 12 pin connection. (PO did this but I had to clean it up).

New Pos and Neg battery cables.

Starter wire that goes to the solenoid. (PO soldered them half a$$ so I cut, cleaned, crimped and wrapped them).

A picture is worth 1000 words. Attached is the pic of my crappy soldering job and the combo switch that's problematic.

Thanks in advance!!! I've read some really awesome threads and learned a lot so far but have a long way to go.

post-24025-14150814378714_thumb.jpg

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use the Search engine here on the site, you'll find that the S30's 240/260/280Z never had Relays on the headlight circuit. the lack of relays means the power of the headlights goes thru the fuse box, wiring, connectors and the combo switch. Lots or amperage cause the wires to overheat.

If you had a 240Z, I would suggest my Plug in headlight relay upgrade harness, BUT the only thing I can offer is to research headlight relay wiring or get one of my Hard-wire upgrade harnesses, or buy the one from Black Dragon.

Dave

Edited by Zs-ondabrain
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Dave,

Thanks for the input. I was reading through quite a bit and did find that they never ran relays, which surprises me for how advanced these cars were for their time. At any rate, the best option is just to upgrade instead of finding the potential problem? Or is the problem most likely all the juice running through the combination switch?

Thanks Dave for your input, it's most appreciated. I'll let you know if I can round up the cash for your Headlight Harness, which is a fair price. Times are a bit tough for a student these days so I may have to run with the Black Dragon one.

Thanks,

Colin

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Yes, The problem IS all the juice running through the old wiring, with no relays.

Which ever you decide, it'll be better than running the headlights without a relay set-up of Some sort. Choose wisely Grasshopper...... LOL

I understand the budget, I LIVE on a budget.

Dave

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I had that same issue as you did, what I did to fix the issue is that I cleaned all the connections that I could see, inside the car and in the engine. Another think that will save you lots of headaches is to change out the fuse blocks in the engine compartment. Read the atlanticz site. I went to walmart and bought 2 blocks and installed them on my 280z and noticed that it has saved me several headaches. Now i'm in the process of changing out the fuse box, thats another thing that I have noticed that also heats up either because the connections aren't clean. My suggestion is to clean every connection that you can even grounds and you will see that your problem will disapear. Good luck,

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Blue and dcruz, thanks for your replies. I'm going to switch over to the Black Dragon relay setup next weekend, too broke for Dave's. This isn't a daily driver, just need to get it to pass safety and get tags for now.

Today I'll clean the fusable links that are problematic and the rest next week. Have a Thermotime switch, that I think is giving me trouble too. Maybe cleaning the connection will solve that issue. I'll post my results later on today and let y'all know what happened.

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I bought the BD relay kit. I replaced most of it before installing it. The relays are non standard. You should at least replace those with more typical relays and bases. (found on Amazon for pretty cheap) You'll also need to install your own fuses because the kit doesn't have any.

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Well, cleaned the hell out of the fusable links and the heat took a little longer to arrive but it showed up again. I'm over it, I'll just upgrade! Thanks for your advise Steve, I may ask a few questions later on when I get the kit in hand, if you don't mind. I feel so lost when it comes to electrical stuff.

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Yes, I'm in the same boat as you but working here and there on the car has paid off, fix some issues here and some new issues will pop up, just be patient and you will figure it out, the fuse links are big problems for this cars. Keep at it and you will get it.

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