TR7 & TR8 Forum
Has anyone upgraded to a modern fuse box on a TR7
Posted by tdhat
|
Has anyone upgraded to a modern fuse box on a TR7
#1
|
|
|
|
Topic Creator (OP)
Aug 19, 2019 04:05 PM
Joined 11 years ago
49 Posts
|
|
10111775
Dan Hogan
|
Aug 19, 2019 07:30 PM
Joined 8 years ago
59 Posts
|
|
eflexter
Eddie Flexter
DE SOTO, KS, USA
Sign in to contact
1957 Land Rover Series I
1960 MG MGA 1600 "The "A" 1965 Ford Mustang 1968 Jaguar E-Type Coupe & more |
Aug 19, 2019 09:18 PM
Joined 13 years ago
487 Posts
|
|
Aug 19, 2019 09:25 PM
Joined 6 years ago
115 Posts
|
|
|
sheetsofsound
Brent Taylor
New Westminster, BC, Canada
Sign in to contact
|
Aug 19, 2019 11:46 PM
Joined 11 years ago
394 Posts
|
I had the loom out of the car and did this:
It tested out ok on the bench and now that its in the car, everything so far seems to work, although the car does not run yet. (Part of a V6 swap from a Camaro that I've been working on forever.)
I can get part numbers if you're interested further; I did this awhile ago and would have to look them up. I remember that I struggled trying to find something that allowed the wires to be connected straight in from behind, as opposed to coming in on an angle from the side.
Brent
It tested out ok on the bench and now that its in the car, everything so far seems to work, although the car does not run yet. (Part of a V6 swap from a Camaro that I've been working on forever.)
I can get part numbers if you're interested further; I did this awhile ago and would have to look them up. I remember that I struggled trying to find something that allowed the wires to be connected straight in from behind, as opposed to coming in on an angle from the side.
Brent
|
|
Topic Creator (OP)
Aug 20, 2019 06:53 AM
Joined 11 years ago
49 Posts
|
|
Aug 20, 2019 03:38 PM
Joined 6 years ago
115 Posts
|
|
I went with a six relay box with fuses. It's a bit too big to fit under the dash or in the glove box but it is a decent little unit. I out mine under hood next to the ignition box I added.
I got it on amazon. It's not waterproof, but I'm not doing any rally events or going mud bogging in the car. I don't think it will be a problem. They are cheap and come with all the little crimp on connectors you need to get the job done (no extras though so be very very careful)
I got it on amazon. It's not waterproof, but I'm not doing any rally events or going mud bogging in the car. I don't think it will be a problem. They are cheap and come with all the little crimp on connectors you need to get the job done (no extras though so be very very careful)
Attachments:
|
sheetsofsound
Brent Taylor
New Westminster, BC, Canada
Sign in to contact
|
Aug 20, 2019 04:15 PM
Joined 11 years ago
394 Posts
|
I bought them through Del City.
https://m.delcity.net/store/ATO/ATC-Block-!-8!Way/p_10823.h_26531
To fit in the original location the direction the wires come into the fuse panel is important and these ones fit well without having to make very many modifications. As I remember, I think i Dremelled away some of the metal bracket.
Brent
https://m.delcity.net/store/ATO/ATC-Block-!-8!Way/p_10823.h_26531
To fit in the original location the direction the wires come into the fuse panel is important and these ones fit well without having to make very many modifications. As I remember, I think i Dremelled away some of the metal bracket.
Brent
|
Aug 21, 2019 04:12 AM
Joined 8 years ago
206 Posts
|
|
I meant to post this when I first saw this topic. Traditional Lucas fuse ratings are not the same as
modern fuses ! If you want to protect your wiring, check the fuse rating very carefully.
Fuse Ratings
Lucas fuses______Modern rating
50 amp__________25 amp
35 amp__________17 amp
25 amp__________12 amp
20 amp__________10 amp
15 amp__________8 amp
10 amp__________5 amp
2 amp__________ 1 amp
Cheers
H
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 2019-08-21 04:15 AM by HowardB.
modern fuses ! If you want to protect your wiring, check the fuse rating very carefully.
Fuse Ratings
Lucas fuses______Modern rating
50 amp__________25 amp
35 amp__________17 amp
25 amp__________12 amp
20 amp__________10 amp
15 amp__________8 amp
10 amp__________5 amp
2 amp__________ 1 amp
Cheers
H
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 2019-08-21 04:15 AM by HowardB.
|
Aug 21, 2019 05:04 AM
Top Contributor
Joined 13 years ago
3,241 Posts
|
|
The TVR 280i was basically a TR7/8 with a fiberglass body when it came to electrics. Even used the same headlight motors, column switches, and a bunch of other stuff. It used one of those kit car looking blade type fuse panels. Pretty much looked like a TR7 wire harness with a different panel. Don't remember ever having any electrical issues with that car. Its problems seemed to be confined to rear suspension quirks, and that unit was from a Jag with a bad layout of control arms. I'm planning on a Painless wiring harness or similar knockoff for the LS3 powered coupe, but as of now, there will be zero creature comforts in the car. The Painless sytem will give me the ability to expand later on if I so choose.
|
Darth V8R
Vance Navarrette
|
Aug 22, 2019 08:22 PM
Top Contributor
Joined 12 years ago
6,760 Posts
|
In reply to # 1642718 by HowardB
I meant to post this when I first saw this topic. Traditional Lucas fuse ratings are not the same as
modern fuses ! If you want to protect your wiring, check the fuse rating very carefully.
Fuse Ratings
Lucas fuses______Modern rating
50 amp__________25 amp
35 amp__________17 amp
25 amp__________12 amp
20 amp__________10 amp
15 amp__________8 amp
10 amp__________5 amp
2 amp__________ 1 amp
Cheers
H
modern fuses ! If you want to protect your wiring, check the fuse rating very carefully.
Fuse Ratings
Lucas fuses______Modern rating
50 amp__________25 amp
35 amp__________17 amp
25 amp__________12 amp
20 amp__________10 amp
15 amp__________8 amp
10 amp__________5 amp
2 amp__________ 1 amp
Cheers
H
Howard:
If you are not aware, the difference in the fuse ratings is due to the agencies used to rate them.
Lucas fuses use the DIN standard (German industrial standard) which rated fuses at the current guaranteed to instantaneously blow the fuse.
US fuses use the UL (Underwriters Laboratories) standard, which rates fuses at the maximum current the fuse will carry without ever blowing. The current generation of blade fuses are also rated at the maximum continuous current without blowing.
And yes, to translate between the two rating systems, one multiplies the DIN rating by 0.5 to arrive at the approximate UL rating. Always a good thing to remind people, and inform the newbies.
As far as the glass cartridge fuses go, the UL fuses will normally be slightly longer than the Lucas fuse. US glass fuses of the standard variety are 1.25 inches long, while Lucas fuses are 30mm, or 1.2 inches long. In my TR8 it is not possible to insert a US fuse into the fuse box (OK, if you use a hammer, you can make it fit, but otherwise...)
Vance
1980 Platinum Metallic TR8, frame off restoration, complete.
1974 Jensen Healey, now assembled and awaiting startup. =:-)
|
Aug 23, 2019 02:16 AM
Joined 8 years ago
206 Posts
|
|
Vance
I would be surprised if the DIN standard applied to GB fuses made in the 1960's & earlier since they would have been covered by a British Standard at that time (sorry I can't locate the BS reference)
As you say, the main problem is that most TR owners do not know that there is a difference in ratings between modern blade fuses, as discussed in this thread, and the traditional Lucas fuses.
Howard
I would be surprised if the DIN standard applied to GB fuses made in the 1960's & earlier since they would have been covered by a British Standard at that time (sorry I can't locate the BS reference)
As you say, the main problem is that most TR owners do not know that there is a difference in ratings between modern blade fuses, as discussed in this thread, and the traditional Lucas fuses.
Howard
|
Darth V8R
Vance Navarrette
|
Aug 23, 2019 11:53 AM
Top Contributor
Joined 12 years ago
6,760 Posts
|
In reply to # 1643145 by HowardB
Vance
I would be surprised if the DIN standard applied to GB fuses made in the 1960's & earlier since they would have been covered by a British Standard at that time (sorry I can't locate the BS reference)
As you say, the main problem is that most TR owners do not know that there is a difference in ratings between modern blade fuses, as discussed in this thread, and the traditional Lucas fuses.
Howard
I would be surprised if the DIN standard applied to GB fuses made in the 1960's & earlier since they would have been covered by a British Standard at that time (sorry I can't locate the BS reference)
As you say, the main problem is that most TR owners do not know that there is a difference in ratings between modern blade fuses, as discussed in this thread, and the traditional Lucas fuses.
Howard
Howard:
Can't offer a comment on that. All I can say is that my 1974 TR6 and my 1980 TR8 came stock with DIN rated fuses. Prior to 1974, they may have been Imperial, SAE, UL, DIN, JIS, Klingon, Romulan, or...?
Just glad you brought it up, as it is important. I took a blown fuse from my TR8 to my FLAPS, and asked for a replacement. He tried to give me a UL rated fuse which not only would have set my wiring on fire, but was also too long to fit. I had to inform him of the differences and asked if he had an equivalent. Nope.
Ended up ordering several different fuses from BritishWiring.com. They were proper English fuses except for one set which was, you guessed it, UL fuses! I had to inform the proprietor of the differences, and he went and checked his stock. Sure enough, he acknowledged his supplier had screwed up and shipped him a batch of UL fuses instead. So it is important and needs to be repeated often - even for people who should know better.
Cheers from across the pond,
Vance
P.S. Don't forget Murphy's law Corollary #86: A $300 wiring harness will always spontaneously combust in order to protect a 10 cent fuse.
1980 Platinum Metallic TR8, frame off restoration, complete.
1974 Jensen Healey, now assembled and awaiting startup. =:-)
|
Aug 24, 2019 04:07 AM
Joined 8 years ago
206 Posts
|
|
|
Darth V8R
Vance Navarrette
|
Aug 28, 2019 07:06 PM
Top Contributor
Joined 12 years ago
6,760 Posts
|
In reply to # 1643334 by HowardB
Vance
Even further away than you guessed. Currently living in Qatar and while there are some interesting preserved cars here, sadly no TR7's
Cheers
In reply to # 1643197 by Darth V8R
Cheers from across the pond,
Vance
Cheers from across the pond,
Vance
Vance
Even further away than you guessed. Currently living in Qatar and while there are some interesting preserved cars here, sadly no TR7's
Cheers
What?
But, but, but you have a union jack indicator for your country of origin.
Oh, I get it. Like James Bond, when abroad you are still in the service of the queen.
Kewl.
Vance
1980 Platinum Metallic TR8, frame off restoration, complete.
1974 Jensen Healey, now assembled and awaiting startup. =:-)
Having trouble posting or changing forum settings?
Read the Forum Help (FAQ) or click Contact Support at the bottom of the page.















