GrahamFountain wrote: ↑Sun Jun 21, 2020 11:32 am
Here's the diagram for what I was thinking. But looking at it, I might apply the KISG principle - equivalent to Keep It Simple Steve.
And the advantage of 50A in both circuits is I don't have to remember which colour wire feeds which lights.
What failure case might cause the dips to draw more than say 15A but less than 50, what's their likelihoods, and what are the potential consequences? Oh God no - doing an FFA on the car already.
Graham
Well, I can find no fault with your circuitry or logic.
A simple tippexed M and D on the relays identifies them well enough in my book! Lucas colour codes are indelibly engraved on my memory as a backup, but i've allowed for the possibility that someone else may one day need to work on the car.
To that end, i'm producing an "owners handbook" for the Dolomega with all the mods listed with part numbers for service items like spark plugs, oil and fuel filters, oil types, brake pads, fanbelt etc and circuit diagrams for the modified wiring, fuse box diagrams with allocated functions and so on. I've changed SO much away from standard that, even now, its hard to remember it all! This may even help ME as I get older and the memory fades even more!
What failure case? A blown bulb is the most likely I would have thought, this often produces a big enough surge to blow a fuse on a normal modern (typically 10a for a single dip or main. Though I use 2 x 20s on quad mains)
I did give some thought to going completely modern with the headlight layout and using constant single filament dips with the inners added on when main beam engaged. There are several cars with a massive and rather complex single relay that does all that for you, but, in the end, KISS triumphed and I left well enough alone!
Steve