HMS_Beagle
Jun 03, 2014Explorer
Anybody every seen a schematic for a Bigfoot?
I have not been able to get one for my pre-bankruptcy (Mark II) 10.4. I would like to get one.
I am having this very "interesting" problem with the running lights. Occasionally (once an hour to once a week) it will blow the fuse in the truck. So an intermittent short. There are 12 LED clearance lights, 2 LED taillights and an incandescent license plate lamp, so wiring all over the place and mostly inaccessible. The main ground bus is accessible, I found the ground lead for the lights - actually there are 3 of them wired in parallel - and also discovered that these grounds are shared by most of the ceiling wiring - fans, light, etc.
There are two possibilities: either the power and ground lead at a light is shorting together, or the power lead is shorting to some other ground. I thought I would put a smaller fuse in the ground lead, if it is the former it will blow that fuse, if the latter it will blow the fuse in the truck and not that fuse. That may add to knowledge without getting me any closer to a fix. And the fact that the ceiling wiring is grounded through the same wires may confound the experiment.
I haven't come up with any other ways to attack this. If it would short hard and permanently it would be much easier to find. Any brilliant ideas?
It would be helpful to know how the factory thought the thing should be wired. I have asked Bigfoot by email and phone with no response. The wiring in most RVs seems to be very haphazard, I have owned only one that had a complete and fairly accurate schematic.
I am having this very "interesting" problem with the running lights. Occasionally (once an hour to once a week) it will blow the fuse in the truck. So an intermittent short. There are 12 LED clearance lights, 2 LED taillights and an incandescent license plate lamp, so wiring all over the place and mostly inaccessible. The main ground bus is accessible, I found the ground lead for the lights - actually there are 3 of them wired in parallel - and also discovered that these grounds are shared by most of the ceiling wiring - fans, light, etc.
There are two possibilities: either the power and ground lead at a light is shorting together, or the power lead is shorting to some other ground. I thought I would put a smaller fuse in the ground lead, if it is the former it will blow that fuse, if the latter it will blow the fuse in the truck and not that fuse. That may add to knowledge without getting me any closer to a fix. And the fact that the ceiling wiring is grounded through the same wires may confound the experiment.
I haven't come up with any other ways to attack this. If it would short hard and permanently it would be much easier to find. Any brilliant ideas?
It would be helpful to know how the factory thought the thing should be wired. I have asked Bigfoot by email and phone with no response. The wiring in most RVs seems to be very haphazard, I have owned only one that had a complete and fairly accurate schematic.