SolidState
No Mo SHO
I was going to atempt to build my own, but I haven't the time or knowledge to do it right. I don't know what relays to get, and I am assuming that I need two; one for lowbeams and one for highbeams....
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SolidState said:I was going to atempt to build my own, but I haven't the time or knowledge to do it right. I don't know what relays to get, and I am assuming that I need two; one for lowbeams and one for highbeams....
Markus said:Whichever way you decide to go be sure to power the new harness from the alternator or battery (alternator preferred) and to ground the headlights to the altenator, engine block, or battery (alternator preferred). .
ManySHOs said:I actually power mine from the positive stud on the firewall mounted fusebox. I started doing this because the suvlights harness fits much better this way. I've been grounding it to the body (driver's side inner fender/frame rail)
Ian
SolidState said:I am powering my fog lights off my starter, and grounding them to the body, but I am planning on running the headlights off the altenator.
How do you ground to the altenator?
Markus said:Use a ring connector of sufficient inside diameter so that one of the alternator mounting bolts will fit through the ring. Crimp and solder your wire to the connector and attach it to an alternator mounting bolt.
Slo-Sho said:Aftermarket headlamp harnesses are a great start to achieving maximum lumens output from the headlamps. I think however this post is a bit misleading as making your own harness is relatively simple and not some voodoo magic. You simply take two relays (or one if you only want to upgrade one circuit for whatever reason).
Relay #1 SPDT 5 pin standard Bosch type relay (very common)
Wire pins as follows
87 Battery +
87a Not used
30 Headlamp plug
86 wire from existing lamp socket(HI or LO)
85 ground.
The 86 pin wire will "trigger" the relay.
The 30 pin wire goes to the lamp socket.
In my case I had the spare parts and time, so the cost was very minimal.![]()
Slo-Sho said:Aftermarket headlamp harnesses are a great start to achieving maximum lumens output from the headlamps. I think however this post is a bit misleading as making your own harness is relatively simple and not some voodoo magic. You simply take two relays (or one if you only want to upgrade one circuit for whatever reason).
Relay #1 SPDT 5 pin standard Bosch type relay (very common)
Wire pins as follows
87 Battery +
87a Not used
30 Headlamp plug
86 wire from existing lamp socket(HI or LO)
85 ground.
The 86 pin wire will "trigger" the relay.
The 30 pin wire goes to the lamp socket.
In my case I had the spare parts and time, so the cost was very minimal.![]()
SHO92 said:With building your own harness, the only way to making it truly plug and play is to use a Female 9007 plug, the same connector that is on the headlight bulb itself. I have not seen these avaliable anywhere, which means that you have to cut into you factory harness.
This is one of the main reasons I went with the SUV harness, I didn't want to cut into the factory harness. Plus I was done installing the harness in 10 minutes, not the hours it would have taken to make my own.
nkb93 said:FWIW, I found female 9007 connectors at Wal-Mart, near the headlight bulbs and crimp-on electrical terminals. They're not the best quality, I would have preferred bigger leads (I think these were 18 AWG), but I just cut it close to the connector and spliced in the bigger wire, so now there's only a very short section of the smaller wire. Has worked great for the past year or so.
If I had to do it again, I'd just by the ready made harness. It took me about 5 hours to fab up my own harness and install it neatly. Also, I probably spent almost as much doing it myself after I bought all the individual parts.
-Nate