I don't understand why people, especially those in warm climates, add 4 fuses and another relay, when the OE glow relay is perfectly adequate. If you want to make it easy to find which glow plug is burned out, replace the bus bar with 4 individual wires, tied to the feed from the glow plug relay. If you have a clamp on dc ammeter, you don't even need to break the 4 wire tie point to find the bad glow plug.
Pardon my clack.
I did mine up with the outside the passenger compartment heavy loaded relay. Just wasn't right in my mind that sort of juice be inside then run back out. I wonder if the increased length on the OEM setup would be measurable with a clamp on meter at the GPs? I hate crawling up under the dash for electrical problems. My neck no longer has that sort of flexibility.
Quote from: 92EcoDiesel Jetta on September 05, 2013, 08:09:47 amI don't understand why people, especially those in warm climates, add 4 fuses and another relay, when the OE glow relay is perfectly adequate. If you want to make it easy to find which glow plug is burned out, replace the bus bar with 4 individual wires, tied to the feed from the glow plug relay. If you have a clamp on dc ammeter, you don't even need to break the 4 wire tie point to find the bad glow plug.This is an 82 Vanagon and the wires have a longer run for the high amps. When I'm done, it will be no more than 2 feet or so.Besides that, I'll have everything handy right in the engine bay. Both the ignition switch and the GP relay are notorious for failure as they were just barely capable of getting the job done. What I'm doing is taking the load off of them and putting it onto a relay(s) that can be found in any FLAPS - probably anywhere in the world.Adding the GP wiring and fuses is simply an extension of what I was doing anyway. I am adding a WAIC pump and additional radiator with fan, plus an oil cooler rad with fan as well. Doing all that without simply adding separate fuses to the GP's (at the same time) would have been "hard to understand".As to setting it up for Southern California, I'm building it for travel when I retire (yeah, I'm getin' old). Heck, I've even put a block heater in it .The little lady and I hope to wake up in it at about 8,000 feet somewhere in the rockies, cook up some bacon and eggs, a few slices of fried toast and then hit the trail. Could be a long walk out if I set it up for "warm climates".
I don't understand the question. If there is current flowing through the wire, the clamp on ammeter will measure it. There is a fuse in the engine compartment that protects the glow plug relay and associated wiring into the passenger compartment, where it is protected from the elements, that's why the stock system is pretty much trouble free. I had a Ford relay like yours (in a non VW diesel)- that thing was a piece of junk. It corroded badly internally from being in the engine compartment and after a few years stopped making good contact even though it still "clunked".
More resistance less voltage and current correct?
Quote from: ORCoaster on September 06, 2013, 10:43:02 amMore resistance less voltage and current correct?Very true.
Quote from: mtrans on September 06, 2013, 12:40:49 pmQuote from: ORCoaster on September 06, 2013, 10:43:02 amMore resistance less voltage and current correct?Very true.x2Shorter wire = less resistance, higher voltage, higher current = more power to the glow plugs which burns them out faster. More power to the glow plugs is not like more power to the engine with mods. Engine mods are fun. More power to the glow plugs don't give you more fun or better starts, it means you have to replace your glow plugs sooner.
...BTW your Bieber avatar is awesome.-Malone