Rewiring ENTIRE Engine Harness
#126
Ok i said the car runs fine, that would mean the map sensor works fine too ...
everything else works except the Tach, Speedo, Oil, and Temp...
It HAS to be a grounding issue, i just need to figure out what ground it is...
The cluster is fine, it has to do with the x-14 or x-5 connector....
everything else works except the Tach, Speedo, Oil, and Temp...
It HAS to be a grounding issue, i just need to figure out what ground it is...
The cluster is fine, it has to do with the x-14 or x-5 connector....
#132
power steering has one wire....that increases the revs when the steering wheel goes to extremes one way or theother. I had this problem and the guages worked when I bottomed out the steering....removed the wire from the power steering pump and grounded it and the guages have worked ever since.
#133
Originally Posted by ejmack1
well I was thinkin a little bit smaller scale, like a timer circuit ro something to that effect. Something that will switch it off AFTER the engine finally shuts down, maybe like 3-5 minutes afterwards...
I lack in the electrical field and wouldn't really know how to go about doing that....
Anyone have any ideas?
Can anyone else confirm that taking off one of the ecu grounds ( There are two that bolt to the engine) will make the fans run?
I lack in the electrical field and wouldn't really know how to go about doing that....
Anyone have any ideas?
Can anyone else confirm that taking off one of the ecu grounds ( There are two that bolt to the engine) will make the fans run?
#134
Originally Posted by cover8
power steering has one wire....that increases the revs when the steering wheel goes to extremes one way or theother. I had this problem and the guages worked when I bottomed out the steering....removed the wire from the power steering pump and grounded it and the guages have worked ever since.
and here is a pic of the engine bay... i need to pull the motor and sand and repaint the engine bay... that damn turbo is getting coated next
#135
Broken93, you could forego the digital logic stuff and make a pretty simple temperature controlled circuit, by rigging up a crude 2- or 4-bit flash a/d converter to control the output of your op-amp based on the resistance of a thermistor. I'll try to design something like that this week or next, depending on how much free time I have. We're going over stuff like that in my analog class right now.
EJMack, that's a pretty spartan engine bay you've got there, it's looking pretty good. Have you driven it without power steering yet? I'm considering removing mine, if I can figure out a way to keep my car cool enough without A/C.
-s-
EJMack, that's a pretty spartan engine bay you've got there, it's looking pretty good. Have you driven it without power steering yet? I'm considering removing mine, if I can figure out a way to keep my car cool enough without A/C.
-s-
#136
Originally Posted by scotty305
Broken93, you could forego the digital logic stuff and make a pretty simple temperature controlled circuit, by rigging up a crude 2- or 4-bit flash a/d converter to control the output of your op-amp based on the resistance of a thermistor. I'll try to design something like that this week or next, depending on how much free time I have. We're going over stuff like that in my analog class right now.
-s-
-s-
The easiest thing I can think to do, going that route, would be to make the thermistor part of an Op-amp's feedback and give the op-amp a constant voltage input (i.e. +12V), so that when the thermistor reached the proper shutdown temp, the op-amp output went over the threshold voltage of a flip-flop, and triggered a shutdown of the fans.
You would still want to run that type of circuit with a timer as well in case the thermistor failed - you don't want to run your fans forever and kill the battery.
#137
Originally Posted by scotty305
Broken93, you could forego the digital logic stuff and make a pretty simple temperature controlled circuit, by rigging up a crude 2- or 4-bit flash a/d converter to control the output of your op-amp based on the resistance of a thermistor. I'll try to design something like that this week or next, depending on how much free time I have. We're going over stuff like that in my analog class right now.
EJMack, that's a pretty spartan engine bay you've got there, it's looking pretty good. Have you driven it without power steering yet? I'm considering removing mine, if I can figure out a way to keep my car cool enough without A/C.
-s-
EJMack, that's a pretty spartan engine bay you've got there, it's looking pretty good. Have you driven it without power steering yet? I'm considering removing mine, if I can figure out a way to keep my car cool enough without A/C.
-s-
#138
where the F is my connector
Please help.. I am in the middle of sequential vacuum simplification and while im at it im gonna re-wrap my harness.. but one of my buddies was taking my uim off and forgot which of the two black plugs went where and where the white plug goes.. i am installing the block-off plate kit and i want to loose everything except the Idle Sensor Control from what i have been reading.. So i guess im asking which plug is that.
Last edited by iluvmy3rdgen; 10-18-04 at 01:10 PM.
#140
Originally Posted by MrRx
This seems to be the place to ask about harness stuff, Im wireing up a haltech, how do i get the tacho, back up light, and gauges to work?
#142
Originally Posted by iluvmy3rdgen
Please help.. I am in the middle of sequential vacuum simplification and while im at it im gonna re-wrap my harness.. but one of my buddies was taking my uim off and forgot which of the two black plugs went where and where the white plug goes.. i am installing the block-off plate kit and i want to loose everything except the Idle Sensor Control from what i have been reading.. So i guess im asking which plug is that.
I don't have a haltech question guys :p
#145
Thanks because there are two black plugs and a white plug.. im eliminating the aws so i need the isc and the iat but dunno which plugs they are :/ this is why i like to disassemble things myself.
#146
Addtl help
I love this thread.
I swear that someone has hacked into my harness at one point. If this is how the grounds are originally, this has got to be another what was Mazda thinking.
You mentioned what you kept, but what about the knock sensor? Did you keep that as well? Also, I'm at a loss about what these are:
Those two pics belong to these two wires. The top wire belongs to the first pic in this group above. Looks like someone extended it themselves.
And if I'm not mistaken, this is the knock sensor...
Nevermind the mess. I was getting nasty blowby out the oil filler neck. The gasket was missing.
Thanks in advance!
I swear that someone has hacked into my harness at one point. If this is how the grounds are originally, this has got to be another what was Mazda thinking.
You mentioned what you kept, but what about the knock sensor? Did you keep that as well? Also, I'm at a loss about what these are:
Those two pics belong to these two wires. The top wire belongs to the first pic in this group above. Looks like someone extended it themselves.
And if I'm not mistaken, this is the knock sensor...
Nevermind the mess. I was getting nasty blowby out the oil filler neck. The gasket was missing.
Thanks in advance!
Last edited by Railgun69; 11-06-04 at 12:03 PM.
#147
I'd like to make a suggestion for some of you guys that havent finished this yet. When you get to the end part, instead of wraping in electrical tape then putting wire loom over it, I'd wire loom it then put the electrical tape over the loom.
Or you could heat shrink it but the problem with that is it you even have a elec prob its going to be a bitch cause you cant easily get to the wires.
Stephen
Or you could heat shrink it but the problem with that is it you even have a elec prob its going to be a bitch cause you cant easily get to the wires.
Stephen
#149
I did my harness and it is time consuming. I went down to the pick a part and loaded up on all the good connectors from the Mazda's there. I would solder the connections, yes its a pain but wort the time. I steeped up the gage in all cases.