Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 782 Threads: 26
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Location: On a hill in Wiltshire
I have never used one, I think you are right and a single turn of wire goes through the hole.
Easy enough to try with an odd bit of extra wire, without fitting to the dash.
Joined: Mar 2015 Posts: 5,442 Threads: 231
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Location: Scotchland
You are correct Ivor, loop through and then connect as normal.
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 1,644 Threads: 23
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Location: The village of Evenley
Car type: 1934 Austin Seven RP Deluxe
Thanks fellas, I can get the dash wired up now, that’s great
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 131 Threads: 11
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Location: Herefordshire
The induction type were fitted to Rubies and are far safer as there is less risk of a detached wire causing a short.
Joining the ends of the existing wires provides a good opportunity to insert a 20amp inline fuse into the circuit.
Before you fit it to the car, either experiment with a jury rig or find a reliable source for the correct orientation of the loop so that charge/discharge are on the correct scale
Hope this helps
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 1,644 Threads: 23
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Location: The village of Evenley
Car type: 1934 Austin Seven RP Deluxe
Thanks David, I knew I’d seen this type before and as my box saloon is a car for driving, I don’t mind the wrong gauge...I wondered whether not there was a right and a wrong way to run the loop, I’m not sure how I’ll jury rig something, I think I’ll just have to guess and if it goes the wrong way, take the dash out again and change it!
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 483 Threads: 14
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Location: Dunchurch, Warwickshire
David's suggestion of fitting a 20A fuse is very sensible - hopefully that will blow (c.50p) rather than your expensive ammeter. It's best to fit the fuse fairly close to the battery.
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 1,644 Threads: 23
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Location: The village of Evenley
Car type: 1934 Austin Seven RP Deluxe
Thanks for the reassurance David, I’ll fit a fuse as suggested (now my tiny brain has worked out what it was supposed to be protecting!)
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 483 Threads: 14
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Location: Dunchurch, Warwickshire
If you get a short-circuit somewhere in your wiring, the weakest link will break. Often this is your ammeter, which also happens to be the most expensive part of the circuit... That's why I frequently advise people to fit a fuse between the battery and the ammeter.