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switch panel question


grapegoat

Active Member
Joined
Aug 14, 2007
Messages
37
City
oregon coast
Vehicle Year
1993
Transmission
Manual
i built a panel with 6 toggle switches. they are to power relays for radiator fans, tranny cooler fan, lights, yada yada. i planned on bringing the power to the panel from the fuse box (via add-a-circuit). my question is do i need to wire the switches in series or parallel? i been searchin for days and cant find the answer. thanks guys.
 
i would do parallel because if you do series bad things can happen. if one thing went out all of them would go out. each switch should have its own power and fuse
 
i would do parallel because if you do series bad things can happen. if one thing went out all of them would go out. each switch should have its own power and fuse

^ this

never do series circuts always parallel
 
i would do parallel because if you do series bad things can happen. if one thing went out all of them would go out. each switch should have its own power and fuse

a fuse for each switch? i was told to run one fused power wire from the fuse box and daisy chain it to the (power in) pin on each switch. one fuse for the whole panel. :icon_confused:
 
PICT1086.JPG


I paid about $60 for this one. Sorry for the poor quality.:dunno:

The labels are embossed into the panel.

PROJ--ALT--METH--LVL--FOG
 
well if you do one fuse on the power in if you blow the fuse all of them will go out. fuses are cheap. just do it right
 
well if you do one fuse on the power in if you blow the fuse all of them will go out. fuses are cheap. just do it right

+1

Not only that, if you run only one fuse and that fuse blows, you won't be able to trigger your relays running your vitals, like your radiator fan, trans cooler fan, etc.
 
I used a 12g hot wire to power all the leds and then wired in a relay to each of the light circuits.

Never would I wire a radiator fan only to a toggle switch.:icon_confused:
 
+1

Not only that, if you run only one fuse and that fuse blows, you won't be able to trigger your relays running your vitals, like your radiator fan, trans cooler fan, etc.

true. thats why you can replace them. pop in a new fuse and off you go again. either way, atleast you have a fuse protecting that circuit. right??

I used a 12g hot wire to power all the leds and then wired in a relay to each of the light circuits.

Never would I wire a radiator fan only to a toggle switch.:icon_confused:

i never said anything bout wiring a toggle to my radiator fan. i said they are to power the relays for the fans. i know not to power things directly through toggles. my toggles are only there to switch my relays.

what i want to know is, will this circuit work?

i have a fused power wire from the fuse box going to my switch panel. I daisy chained the power wire to each (power in) pin on each switch. i did the same to the ground pins and ran them to the body. ran the power out to the proper pin on each relay.

i know blowing that fuse will stop everything. but i could run the wire from the (not used) 5th pin on a relay to a dummy light on the panel to indicate when the fans are off. just to be safe. :dunno:

if having a fuse for each switch is the right way, then how would i put 5 more fuses coming off my fuse box?? seems like the fuse box is the best place to tap in to the power.
 
Last edited:
Get the inline fuses. Its a piece of wire with a replacable fuse in it. Any parts store should have them
 
Don't be a lazy couch potato... just do what everyone else has said and run a separate fused wire for each switch.
 
i built a panel with 6 toggle switches. they are to power relays for radiator fans, tranny cooler fan, lights, yada yada. i planned on bringing the power to the panel from the fuse box (via add-a-circuit). my question is do i need to wire the switches in series or parallel? i been searchin for days and cant find the answer. thanks guys.


hmmm.....i wouldnt run power...or that many power wires for relay control....thats just stupid.


set up your relay bank near the battery or to its own little housing with a fat bastard power lead feeding it off the alt post or battery or whatever. run the loads through respective fuse block feeds with your relay bank pre relay and the power side of the relay switching to a key on source.


run the ground side of the switching of the relays to your toggles. this minimizes wiring work and risk of fire... your cooling fans are easily fitted to three way switches which allow on-off-auto modes with minimal wiring efforts.
 
hmmm.....i wouldnt run power...or that many power wires for relay control....thats just stupid.

set up your relay bank near the battery or to its own little housing with a fat bastard power lead feeding it off the alt post or battery or whatever. run the loads through respective fuse block feeds with your relay bank pre relay and the power side of the relay switching to a key on source.

run the ground side of the switching of the relays to your toggles. this minimizes wiring work and risk of fire... your cooling fans are easily fitted to three way switches which allow on-off-auto modes with minimal wiring efforts.

there not all for relays. just 3 of them.

:shok: what?? that sounds nothing like all of the 12v wiring writeups i have been reading for the past month.

i am new to the wiring game. please elaberate in english.
 

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