Author Topic: Car Help  (Read 118 times)

Offline Chaos68

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Car Help
« on: June 01, 2002, 01:29:32 PM »
I am looking for a website that could help me.

I am restoring a classic car and i need help.
What i need help on is its a 4 stroke deisal and it has "2" 6 volt car battaries/ where im stuck is i know british cars were hooked up backwards to up US car batts. I am looking for a website that could help me figure out how to hook up these 2 batts so i wont blow out the electrical system.

Any help would be great!

Offline loser

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Car Help
« Reply #1 on: June 01, 2002, 03:42:13 PM »
are you talking about the old skool positive ground systems?

convert it dude!

The reason to do this conversion is convenience, not reliability - it allows you to use modern electrical accesories, especially radios.
There is an article in the April 1993 issue of British Car summarizing this conversion - the following is a summary of the important points, with additions based on the experience of VTR members.

Remove the battery

If you have a radio, remove it.

Remove the central panel in dash and reverse the wires conected to the Ammeter. Replace panel.

If you have an electrical fuel pump (non-original on TR-4), and it's a late model SU with a diode across the points rather than a condensor, reverse the connections to the diode.

Connect the (-) post of the coil to the wire going to the distributor, the (+) post to the wire going to the ignition switch.

Replace the battery, with the terminals reversed. If you are using the car as a daily driver, I'd strongly recomend that you replace both the ground strap and the positive lead going to the starter solenoid with new cables.

It's cheap, and will give you a better connection, which means more reliable starting.

Disconnect the two leads to the generator. Temporarily connect one end of a length of wire to the positive terminal of the battery. Touch the other end of the wire to the F terminal on the generator (the one the smaller lead is connected to, wire is brown with green stripe) several times briefly. This repolarises the field windings so you get the proper output.

Reconnect the two leads to the generator.
That's it - all the electrical devices on the car will now work like normal. You can install a new negative-ground radio, or other electrical accesories. .



« Last Edit: June 01, 2002, 03:47:41 PM by loser »

Offline Tumor

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Car Help
« Reply #2 on: June 02, 2002, 06:24:58 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by loser
are you talking about the old skool positive ground systems?

convert it dude!
 


??....shame on you loser, he said "restore" not "rebuild"!!
"Dogfighting is useless"  :Erich Hartmann