V8 Middy wrote:DAMKIA wrote:
Use a decent guage of wire (4 or 8 Ga ricer boombox stuff, FUSED AT THE BATTERY!!!) to get the power up to the roof bar and mount the relays up there. Run a decent earth too (often overlooked).
So if the wire is the same guage all the way through a continuous circuit, what difference does it make having the relays up on the roof?
None, but the idea is to use a very heavy guage wire to get the "bulk" power up to the roof then tap off that with smaller wire to the lights.
Imagine a hose pipe with a tap. Turn on the tap and water flows out at a certain rate. Put a trigger on the end of the hose and water still flows at the same rate.
Definitely fuse as close to the battery as possible (ie. centimeters!!) From there, mount the relays wherever is most practical... probably in the engine bay. 8Ga wire will be enough for 400W of lights. If you like, you can even connect 1 length of 8ga wire to both relays. Otherwise, if its easier the run 2 lengths of slightly thinner wire.
Ok, the idea is to feed one mofo power cable up there (capable of handling 50-80A over its length with minimal voltage drop), and then tap into it at the roof level, instead of running several smaller wires for each light (carrying med-heavy current 10-16 A or so). In effect it is a buss bar system that most sparkies would be well familiar with. Would also suggest a 2 pin Anderson power connection and Molex trigger wire connector to be added under the bonnet if you want to remove the lightbar in the city (police reasons...) or at least disconnect it for safety.
The only wires will be a 8 Ga +ve, 8 Ga earth, and one light duty 18-22 Ga trigger cable for each relay, versus a seperate med-heavy power wire for each light and an 8 Ga heavy earth return. Much easier to have to deal with one heavy +12v wire than 4 medium +12v ones, heavy one is more rigid and less susceptable to vibration. One 8 Ga power line for 4 x 100 watt lights, one earth return, and one relay trigger for all on/all off operation, or two triggers for 2x2 on/off. Trigger wire have 5 amp fuses, all that is really necessary.
The other issue is about the voltage drop along the power cable. With lights, about 20% of their brightness comes in the last 1-1.5 volts of their operation (compare headlight brightness at 12.8 v engine off, then with 14 volt fast idle) The main idea behind the buss bar approach (in any electical application) is to minimise the voltage losses, therefore reduce heat generation in the cabling, and reduce the possibility of shorts ocurring due to softening/failing insulation.
This also gives the option of peeling off an external 12v socket for campsite light/power, or seperate line for adjustable worklight/overhead reversing light without having to run yet another heavy cable carrying switched current from under the bonnet.
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