Friday, October 31

Wiring Your Trailer Hitch 2


Dodge Charger Grilles
But wiring a trailer may not be easy. If you're towing just for the day and don't ever plan to tow again, you can pick up some adapters that replace the taillight bulbs in your vehicle and have pigtailed wires hanging from them. How you route the wires out of the light sockets and down to the hitch can be problematic. And what if you have a trailer with simple 1-lamp lights and a car with multiple taillights, like most European cars? At the very least, odds are the trailer and vehicle use different connectors, as the trailering industry uses at least four different styles.
Red To Green To White
Let's start with the basics. Most trailers have three circuits--for running lights, and left and right brake lights. The brake lights will flash for the turn-signal function--it's up to the flasher relay in the car to know when the brake lights are on and to flash the appropriate filament. So technically, you need only three wires to the trailer plus a ground wire.

Always run a ground wire from the frame of the vehicle (not from the hitch or bumper) to the trailer. The metal-to-metal contact in the hitch is not reliable enough for a consistent connection.

This means you'll need a connector with at least four contacts. Not surprisingly, the standard flat-style connector for trailers uses four pins, with one unshrouded male pin on the vehicle end for the ground. Other common styles of connectors use five, six or seven pins, and these are the styles you'll see installed by the manufacturers on new vehicles. Why more than four? Larger trailers sometimes use a separate circuit for running lights on the sides and front of the trailer. Some trailers use electrically actuated brakes. It's not uncommon for enclosed trailers to have interior lights or accessories powered by the vehicle battery, so that means another circuit.
Do not freak. As long as you concern yourself with only one circuit at a time, this job will not require you to read those schematic diagrams that have tiny little wires labeled with type too small for even a lawyer to read.
Over-The-Counter
Got a 7-pin connector on the truck and an inline 4-pin connector on the trailer? We found an adapter at the auto parts store that makes this plug-and-play. Other permutations of connectors may be adaptable with off-the-shelf parts.
Splice It
Worst case--you have a car or truck with no provision for trailer lights, and a trailer with a harness that ends with chopped-off wires. You'll need nothing more complicated than a 12-volt test light or volt-meter, and some splicing capability. Start by turning on the vehicle's running lamps. Now probe the vehicle wiring to find out which wire leading to the taillights is hot. Splice into this wire and bring it to the vehicle side of the trailer connector. Which pin? The connector should come with a list specifying which pin handles which circuit. Follow it--but don't for a minute trust that someone else who wired your vehicle before you followed anything except his own whim. Tag each wire with its function as you identify it. Now you can turn off the running lamps and activate the left turn signal. Identify which circuit is the blinker, and repeat for the right turn signal. Wire all to the connector.
Dodge Charger Grilles

Thursday, October 30

Wiring Your Trailer Hitch.1

Chevy Tahoe Lights
The rental yard is busy. The utility trailer you want is inexpensive, and the yard help assists you in hooking up the trailer hitch and safety chains. Now to drive home and load the trailer with the entirety of a teenager's life, then ship her off to college several states away.

But not until you hook up the lights on the trailer. The trailer dealership won't let you leave until the lights work. And the trailer plug on the back of your truck doesn't remotely match the one on the trailer. The friendly trailer-hitch counterman points to the display of electrical connectors and suggests that if you can't get them working on your own, he can have a mechanic do it for you, first thing Monday morning.

Desperate Times, Desperate Measures
Trailer wiring may be easy. Many vehicles, particularly pickups and SUVs, come prewired for trailers. If there's a preinstalled hitch, the connector might already be in place behind a convenient spring-loaded cap. Or, if you've bought a new vehicle, you may find the harness needed to install the connector inside the glovebox. Simply unplug the connector to the rear lights on your truck, plug in the trailer harness between the male and female ends, and you're ready.
 
Click to enlarge
This pickup came with an adapter harness for the trailer hitch in the glovebox. Simply disconnect the loom to the truck lights and plug in the adapter. You'll still need to wire the trailer.
 Chevy Tahoe Lights

Thursday, October 16

Hitch Wiring


Chrysler 300 Grills

Features

Quick Plug design for simple installation
Includes OEM connector, 2 ft of 12 gauge wire, and a protective sleeve
Covered by a 1-year warranty
Description

Easily install your brake controller with a Curt Brake Controller Wiring Harness. Featuring the easy-to-install quick plug design, these Brake Controllers install in seconds with no hard-wiring necessary. Spend your time out on the road to your next adventure, not trying to wire up trailer controls. Curt Brake Controller Wiring Harnesses come with an OEM connector, 2ft. of 12-gauge wire and a protective sleeve to prevent wire damage. Backed by Curt’s 1-year warranty.

Chrysler 300 Grills

Tuesday, October 7

More Cool Police Cars from around the World.


Cadillac Automotive Grille.

Here are some more cool police cars from around the world.

Finally, obviously not real this picture but the Bugatti Veyron would be worth joining the police for!




Here is my sons favorite and this is in fact a real police car unlike mine!

Personally, if I wanted to be a Policeman or woman, I would move to Germany by the looks of the cool police cars! High Speed pursuits just wouldn't be the same again. Worlds wildest police cases but be closed down!

Cadillac Automotive Grille.

Friday, October 3

Carmakers Sound Alarm at Gloomy Paris Show

Dodge Magnum grills
PARIS (Reuters) - Top automakers including General Motors Corp (GM) and Ford warned of tough times as the Paris Auto Show opened on Thursday amid concerns that slowing demand could force production cuts and job losses. ADVERTISEMENT
Volkswagen's latest Golf and Toyota's new Avensis saloon for Europe headline the event, which opened under a cloud as makers struggle to attract buyers worried by slowing economies and as a global credit crisis hurts auto leasing.
Ford Motor Co (F.N) Chief Executive Alan Mulally said he expected no recovery in the global car market until 2010 and urged governments and central banks to work together to bring stability back to the financial markets.
"2009 is not going to be better than 2008," Mulally told reporters at the show. "We won't see a recovery until 2010," he added, noting markets were down around the globe.



GM's (GM.N) chief operating officer, Fritz Henderson, warned of weakness to come in both the U.S. and western European markets.

"Certainly in the first half (of 2009) it's going to be weak," Henderson told reporters at the show, noting weakness in western Europe.

"We're all under some pressure for the next 12 to 24 months," he said.

Mitsuo Kinoshita, senior board member at Japan's Toyota Motor Corp (7203.T), said the credit crunch was hurting consumer confidence and could force Toyota to review its global sales targets of 9.5 million vehicles in 2008 and 9.7 million for next year.

A source at Europe's biggest automaker, Volkswagen (VOWG.DE), told Reuters that the company faced tough times at Spanish unit Seat and while the company's overall targets remain intact, it may have to consider trimming output.

"If markets continue to develop in such a dramatic way then we have to consider reining in production," the source told Reuters at the show.

Volkswagen Chief Executive Martin Winterkorn told reporters that VW expects to be able to generate a small gain in unit sales and revenue next year despite turmoil on financial markets, while confirming VW's outlook for 2008.
He also said the company, which plans to start making cars at a U.S. plant in Tennessee, wants to benefit from government aid offered to U.S. makers.
"We will raise our hand when the time comes," Winterkorn said.
President George W. Bush on Tuesday signed into law a spending bill which included guarantees of $25 billion in low-interest loans for U.S. automakers Ford, GM and Chrysler LLC.
The aid comes as U.S. demand slumps and makers tool up for production of more fuel efficient and environmentally-friendly vehicles, including electric models.
Major automakers reported a 26-percent plunge in U.S. September sales, including Ford off 34 percent and Toyota down 32 percent, its steepest decline since 1987.
Auto executives said Americans had either walked away from vehicle purchases or been stymied by a lack of financing or requirements for larger down-payments.
Renault SA (RENA.PA) CEO Carlos Ghosn told reporters at the show that no one could rule out difficult years for the auto sector in 2009 and 2010 and promised an update on its plans October 23.
Renault outlined a job cuts plan last month.
European rivals Fiat (FIA.MI) and Peugeot-Citroen (PEUP.PA) are also trimming costs to safeguard profits.
Fiat boss Sergio Marchionne this week warned of the knock-on effect which the financial crisis threatened to have on manufacturing.
"(It) will have repercussions at an international level if it is not resolved in America. It will have an impact on industry, that is without doubt," Marchionne said.
Peugeot CEO Christian Streiff told reporters at the show that the French maker had achieved 2 billion euros ($2.79 billion) in cost savings in the past 18 months and expected "great progress" in cost reduction in the near future.
The firm is sticking to its 2010 objectives despite the market's tougher climate, Streiff said.
Emmanuel Bulle, a credit analyst at Fitch, told the Reuters Auto Summit on Tuesday that the European market decline was far from over and could go to minus 20 percent.
(Reporting by Gilles Castonguay, Christiaan Hetzner, Jan Schwartz, Helen Massy-Beresford in Paris; Kevin Krolicki in Washington; Writing by Jason Neely; Editing by Sharon Lindores, Greg Mahlich).
Dodge Magnum grills