Hello everyone
I am putting together some fogs for my cd5 accord, and am having a helluva hard time finding the switch schematics.
I want the indicator light to work when the lights are on. I bought a switch for a cd5 but they appear to function the same as a cb.
Atleast they look the same on the back of the plug. Lol. I guess its not impossible they are different or maybe I found miss-labeled pics, but for the sake of arguement lets just say they are the same.
Anyways, there are 5 wires coming out of the plug. 1 black, assuming ground. Two red, two red/black stripe.
I imagine there will be a 30a relay that powers the indicator light and one pair of red/red+black stripe is for that light. The other pair is to actually switch the lights on/off and that pair also goes to the relay. Black = ground.
l
This is all an assumption though, and I would really like some input if anyone can help me I would appreciate it. I am sure once I have this shit in my hands I will be able to figure it out with trial and error, but christ, it would be nice for once not to have to do that with something custom/electrical.
Thanks a bunch. If anyone has a "dumb it down" set of answers, that works for me too. Educate me please, I would/will/do appreciate it.
-Justin
I am putting together some fogs for my cd5 accord, and am having a helluva hard time finding the switch schematics.
I want the indicator light to work when the lights are on. I bought a switch for a cd5 but they appear to function the same as a cb.
Atleast they look the same on the back of the plug. Lol. I guess its not impossible they are different or maybe I found miss-labeled pics, but for the sake of arguement lets just say they are the same.
Anyways, there are 5 wires coming out of the plug. 1 black, assuming ground. Two red, two red/black stripe.
I imagine there will be a 30a relay that powers the indicator light and one pair of red/red+black stripe is for that light. The other pair is to actually switch the lights on/off and that pair also goes to the relay. Black = ground.
l
This is all an assumption though, and I would really like some input if anyone can help me I would appreciate it. I am sure once I have this shit in my hands I will be able to figure it out with trial and error, but christ, it would be nice for once not to have to do that with something custom/electrical.
Thanks a bunch. If anyone has a "dumb it down" set of answers, that works for me too. Educate me please, I would/will/do appreciate it.
-Justin
Comment