Anaconda
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Interesting, mine pass and so do my son's on both his Ninety and D2.If thay are spot lights for MOT thay need to be switched independent
Interesting, mine pass and so do my son's on both his Ninety and D2.If thay are spot lights for MOT thay need to be switched independent
Also for info I have spliced the yellow wire in the images shown above to the H'beam feed <snip>
Maybe he has fitted some relays?If you have done that, wired a Neg to a Live, it's no wonder they don't work ... you have taken the earth away from the LED's and they won't work if you do that.
Also if they are 100W lamps and ther are 2 of them, that's an additional 17Amps that the feed (the one i've asked you about but you haven't replied) has to provide, there is likely to be more than just a headlamp not lighting ... I presume that all that current isn't passing through the column light switch ?
There is a 30 amp fuse between battery and relay. The yellow wire connected to the headlight H'beam feed is a trigger wire that operates the relay once it senses power. It is labelled 'To Negative/H'Beam switch'. I'd imagine this is the wire causing all the problems but apart from to negative where else would it go. There is already a switch built into the harness that arms the spotlights but don't switch them on. They only come on when you use the flasher. If you switch them off using the switch they then don'e operate with the flasher. I'm guessing this is so that you can choose when you want to use them or not.If you have done that, wired a Neg to a Live, it's no wonder they don't work ... you have taken the earth away from the LED's and they won't work if you do that.
Also if they are 100W lamps and ther are 2 of them, that's an additional 17Amps that the feed (the one i've asked you about but you haven't replied) has to provide, there is likely to be more than just a headlamp not lighting ... I presume that all that current isn't passing through the column light switch ?
There is a 30 amp fuse between battery and relay. The yellow wire connected to the headlight H'beam feed is a trigger wire that operates the relay once it senses power. It is labelled 'To Negative/H'Beam switch'. I'd imagine this is the wire causing all the problems but apart from to negative where else would it go.
There is already a switch built into the harness that arms the spotlights but don't switch them on. They only come on when you use the flasher. If you switch them off using the switch they then don'e operate with the flasher. I'm guessing this is so that you can choose when you want to use them or not.
That sounded like the problem to me. I had that challenge putting spotlights on my td5. On more modern vehicles (like the td5) the factory switches are all on the negative side of the circuit. On an earlier defender as the OP has will be on the positive side. It sounds like @_Stingrey_ is trying to use a prebuilt wiring loom that came with the spotlights. This may not be suitable for a vehicle of this age.It gets switched to negative. Modern cars do that, the circuit is live and you connect the negative to complete the circuit.
You, on the other hand, sound like you are switching live (+) although it's difficult to tell as your flow of information isn't...
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