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#1
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#2
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A while ago my right rear light blowed out a fuse, after replacing the bulb and fuse there was no problem for a week But now the same fuse keeps blowing out and the rear right light, inluding the 2 licences plate lights, and the 2 city lights on front,and the dashboard light are out. I meassure a major shortage on the fuse box even when i disconnect all connectors to all lights and removing the dashboard panel (so there is no shorting to the chassis in them) and removed the relays from their socket. Also on the internet pages they suggested that it could be the radio connection but either this is not the problem. My question is : is there maybe a diode in the circuit for the lights (for the relay) and where is this located Do i have to dismantle the fuse box to get closer to the cause of this. Or is there anyone who have had a similar problem and can give me a tip where to look at. Or will my greatest nightmare come true and do i have to strip my car for all the wiring from front to back to look for damaged wires. Thanks in advance for replying with serious tips about this. |

#3
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A while ago my right rear light blowed out a fuse, after replacing the bulb and fuse there was no problem for a week But now the same fuse keeps blowing out and the rear right light, inluding the 2 licences plate lights, and the 2 city lights on front,and the dashboard light are out. I meassure a major shortage on the fuse box even when i disconnect all connectors to all lights and removing the dashboard panel (so there is no shorting to the chassis in them) and removed the relays from their socket. Also on the internet pages they suggested that it could be the radio connection but either this is not the problem. My question is : is there maybe a diode in the circuit for the lights (for the relay) and where is this located Do i have to dismantle the fuse box to get closer to the cause of this. Or is there anyone who have had a similar problem and can give me a tip where to look at. Or will my greatest nightmare come true and do i have to strip my car for all the wiring from front to back to look for damaged wires. Thanks in advance for replying with serious tips about this. (I could do this in Dutch, but that would be impolite in an English language group, right) Not sure what a Sunny looks like but the following is generic enough to apply to pretty much any car: Do you have a schematic to your car? If so, make sure that you indeed unplugged everything on the leg of that fuse. Relays do often contain diodes (at least, they are supposed to) but the ones I've seen usually have them internal to the relay. Those particular diodes are there to absorb back EMF - this is when the field of the relay collapses. The coil basically generates a voltage and this is shunted by this diode. It serves as a protection to whatever drives the relay. These diodes don't need to be super beefy and are often not large enough to blow 10A slow blow fuses - the diode usually opens first. It could be a diode, but I'd say it is far less likely than a wire short somewhere. Do any of the wires attached to this fuse run near the engine? Perhaps some insulation burned off and it is now shorting to ground. If your multimeter is sensitive enough, you could determine about where the short is located by probing on all sockets on that leg - it is physcially closest to where the resistance is the lowest. That's about as serious as "deze weggelopen nederlander (Connecticut, VS)" can be ![]() Ik hoop dat je het probleem snel vindt. Remco Bedankt voor reactie Remco / Thanks for quick reaction Remco |
#4
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Bedankt voor reactie Remco / Thanks for quick reaction Remco As reaction on your questions, No unfortunally i don't have any schematics of the car or a diagram It would make it a lot easyer to pinpoint the fault About the Back emf of the Diode i know that they are there for that reason, i was a Broadcast Engineer in the past and have a little knowhow about electronics, It is good to know now that those diode are inside the relays and not mounted on the back of the socket (it would be a hell to dismantle the fuse box to check this) About the wires near to the engine, i have checked all the wirebundles (kabelbomen) and pulled on them where they vanished in the car in their tules (this was to check that there was not a cable rubbing to the chassis) and as far as i could see there was no blank cable to the body, so my gues is that i have to open the part beside the chairs to see if there is a malfunction in the bundle from front to the rear. And thank you for the measuring tip (i think my MultiMeter is sensitive enough to determine the location) I will try to do this tomorrow it is now 1.45 in the morning over here in the netherlands (Huizen) By the way is there a internet site where i can see the wiring diagram of my car? |
It was _the_ thing to do as teenagers in Denhaag in
#5
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- the names here are quite different and suspect most models are as well. Checking the schematic on my Altima (a 2.2L 4 cyl) and an older manual on a Sentra (a 1.8L 4 cyl) In England the name Sunny is model B13/N14. Don't know if it's the |
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#7
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Thanks - I am Dutch but live in the US. Our names/models might be totally different. Remco |
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#9
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Well, that makes three of us. Ronald is an engineer as well. I can't resist asking " how many electrical engineers does it take to fix a Sunny? " but unfortunately can't think of a good punch line ![]() Maybe "Two to over analyze the problem and one to do the actual work?" ![]() Diodes to stop back EMF really don't need to be huge since it only needs to dissipate the spike for a fraction of time. Since car fuses are usually large (10A or lots more), one would think the diode body would just explode because most fuses are slow blow. You are righ,t though -- there is always a chance it withstands it: They may have put a good size diode somewhere. He did pull all relays, all to no avail which basically would bring one to the same conclusion as measuring all the relays' coils would have -- unless of course the diode is external, which is what Ronald was concerned about. I haven't seen that in cars -- would you happen to know if that is the case with a Sunny? He was looking for a schematic so I'm sure he'd be interested if you have one. Interesting experience with that fan motor. Not sure if his problem is intermittent, but that's a very good thought. ============================== RW================== |
#10
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