โMay-04-2018 05:43 PM
โMay-09-2018 06:11 PM
daboognish88 wrote:LMAO You do have a good sense of humor
Fish tape! Got it.
Well I removed the old light wire from the fuse box and replaced it with a new one.. wired it to the fan real quick to test it out..touched the fan's negative to the seatbelt bolt.. and voila! Let there be.. wind!
I met some strong resistance. Watt are you thinking, they said. Wire you doing this by yourself, they said. Well I stayed positive and kept myself grounded and wired up my motorOhm on my ohm. Shocking I know. lol Ok I'll show myself out.
Thanks everyone! I'll try that fish tape.
โMay-08-2018 02:52 PM
โMay-08-2018 06:22 AM
โMay-08-2018 05:19 AM
โMay-07-2018 09:41 PM
drsteve wrote:daboognish88 wrote:
I'm sure this is incredibly naive (which is why I'm gathering as much info as I can before doing anything) but what I'm really confused about is how I would connect the positive and negative 16 gauge wires of the fan to the one 16 gauge wire that would normally be running the light or furnace.
Do you have a friend or neighbor who knows about this stuff, and would be willing to lend a hand?
โMay-07-2018 09:37 PM
2112 wrote:
The vehicle frame is ground. The battery negative connection is bonded to the frame. There is no need to run the ground wires back to the fuse panel. They are connected to the frame at a convenient location to reduce line length. This applies to the 12VDC side only. 120VAC is different. All three wires on an AC circuit will return to the panel.
โMay-07-2018 06:45 AM
daboognish88 wrote:
I'm sure this is incredibly naive (which is why I'm gathering as much info as I can before doing anything) but what I'm really confused about is how I would connect the positive and negative 16 gauge wires of the fan to the one 16 gauge wire that would normally be running the light or furnace.
โMay-07-2018 05:15 AM
โMay-06-2018 07:58 PM
SoundGuy wrote:daboognish88 wrote:
I'm sure this is incredibly naive (which is why I'm gathering as much info as I can before doing anything) but what I'm really confused about is how I would connect the positive and negative 16 gauge wires of the fan to the one 16 gauge wire that would normally be running the light or furnace.
There isn't just one wire running anything, you need two - one for positive, another for negative. If this basic electricity fact escapes you then it's a pretty good indication you ought to leave this to someone who does understand electrical wiring. ๐
โMay-06-2018 07:32 PM
SoundGuy wrote:daboognish88 wrote:
I'm sure this is incredibly naive (which is why I'm gathering as much info as I can before doing anything) but what I'm really confused about is how I would connect the positive and negative 16 gauge wires of the fan to the one 16 gauge wire that would normally be running the light or furnace.
There isn't just one wire running anything, you need two - one for positive, another for negative. If this basic electricity fact escapes you then it's a pretty good indication you ought to leave this to someone who does understand electrical wiring. ๐
โMay-06-2018 07:01 PM
daboognish88 wrote:
I'm sure this is incredibly naive (which is why I'm gathering as much info as I can before doing anything) but what I'm really confused about is how I would connect the positive and negative 16 gauge wires of the fan to the one 16 gauge wire that would normally be running the light or furnace.
โMay-06-2018 06:48 PM
โMay-06-2018 05:04 PM
โMay-06-2018 04:57 PM
SoundGuy wrote:As I said, if it were me I'd just pull +/- 12 vdc from a nearby overhead light and be done with it ... now that's "simple". ๐daboognish88 wrote:
Yea I decided I'm just going to leave the original AC wire alone in case I or someone else ever wants to reinstall AC.
I've tried going from a nearby light but the wire must be damaged somewhere along the line.
That makes no sense - if the light works there has to be +/- 12 vdc at the light so just tap off that source.