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crwoody

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Posts posted by crwoody

  1. Agreed, the relay would be easiest, you could connect the coil between the white/green wire on the wash switch and the black/green wire on the rear wipe switch, then link the white/green to one side of the relay contact and the other side to the black/light green wire on the wash switch.

  2. I guess you've got two choices here, either disconnect the rear pump motor from it's existing wires and re-wire it in parallel with the coil of the rear wipe relay, or add an extra relay with it's coil wired to the existing wiper relay and use it's normally-open contact to replicate the existing washer switch.

    The washer fluid delay is just the time taken to refill the pipe, I believe there's a non-return valve in there somewhere to stop it leaking back but I suspect they get gummed up after a while.

  3. I had something very similar on one of my previous Defenders, IIRC the outer edge is fitted to the tub with two "P" clips which are clipped over the long vertical bar and screwed to the outer edge of the tub, this the allows the guard to hinge out, the inner edge of the guard is then attached using the fixed brackets. 

    It just means you only have to remove one (or two) screws to get to the lights instead of all of them.

    I'm not a big fan of the light guards myself, I found the ones on the front caused more damage to the wings that the minor "altercation" with the tree would have done :blush: and the lights are cheap enough anyway.

    Each to their own though ;)

     

  4. The heated seat supply fuses are on the supply side before the switches, link 3 - 60A under the seatbox before the ignition relay and then a second one, fuse 33 - 20A after the relay which feeds both switches, from this point the feed and earth return are common to both seats. This is assuming it's the original wiring and not an after-market add-on.

    If it's anything like mine, both had failed due to the heater elements being "scrunched-up" and broken under the fabric outer cover, presumably as a result of "wriggly arse syndrome", trouble is, the base and back sections are wired in series so if one fails they both stop working.

  5. Could also be the alternator brushes/carrier pack.

    I had a similar effect with mine a while ago, when I stripped the alternator afterwards, I found the brush carriers were so full of crud it stopped the brushes sliding properly resulting in insufficient contact with the commutator and little or no charge to the battery.

  6. Same as Western, about into the orange section - but the gauge on mine (2001 Td5) always seemed very non-linear, I'd get maybe 150 miles from the 1st quarter tank (from full) but the last ¼ might only get me 50 miles.

    So like yourself, I never really had much confidence in it, to the point where I used to carry a 2 gallon can full - just in case.

  7. The last time I did this, I wired them through a relay from a decent capacity fused live feed, then just took a feed from the main beam circuit to drive the relay coil, also took the lamps earth return direct to chassis too, this way, it keeps them independent of the original light wiring and with no need for an extra switch.

  8. For me, I'd start by checking the prop shaft UJ's.

    You need to get the car on level ground, chock the wheels securely then take the handbrake off and gears in neutral, then get underneath and shake the prop shafts up/down & side to side at each end to see if there's any play in the joints. If there is, you want to get it sorted sooner rather than later, otherwise you could end up with knackered axle pinion or transfer box bearings and leaking seals.

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