- Joined
- Nov 14, 2008
- Messages
- 1,299
- Points
- 3,101
- Age
- 37
- City
- Worcester, MA
- Vehicle Year
- 2005
- Transmission
- Manual
Looks like the 4x4 control module to me. As for the switch I have no clue, what wires is it connected into?
Get a part # off the box and I'll look it up at work. And I'll check the wiring books just to annoy '85![]()
I did check the wiring manuals. I can't figure it out just from those. I hate wires, can't we just figure out how to broadcast power like we do with radio already?!?!
I did check the wiring manuals. I can't figure it out just from those. I hate wires, can't we just figure out how to broadcast power like we do with radio already?!?!
It was figured out in the 1800's how to broadcast power. They didn't know about cancer or anything yet. Tesla figured it out. Tesla Worked for Edison. Edison killed the project because there would be no way to charge people. That's the short version.
Not to hyjack the thread but:
There was a movie made called "The Quiet Earth". Another one of the "last man on Earth" sci-fi type movies. The Quiet Earth, a 1985 film from New Zealand stared Bruno Lawrence as Zac Hobson, a techie who's involved in "Project Flashlight," a vast energy grid that allows war planes to circle the planet without ever refueling (leave it to "the Americans," who are blamed for the whole ensuing mess, to come up with such a diabolical idea). When what Zac drolly describes as "a malfunction" (thereafter known as "the Effect") occurs early one morning, he awakens to discover that he's apparently the only survivor, human or otherwise, of a catastrophe that has altered the very fabric of the universe. This was a power grid that sent energy through the air.
Great movie with a bad ending. You should see it sometime.
will have to watch that some time.
We need answers. Or dang it, I'll go out and rip a 98 Ranger's dash apart to find that stupid box.