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So glad I braved 2C this morning


Quinten

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Nice

Out of interest what do your wheel buttons do? Where did you buy it and does your horn button work? Ive got the exact same wheel and thinking of adding buttons on.

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Nice

Out of interest what do your wheel buttons do? Where did you buy it and does your horn button work? Ive got the exact same wheel and thinking of adding buttons on.

 

Left and right indicator.  Got the buttons from ebay here. Horn button works as normal too. I'm using this to connect the wheel/buttons to the dash where I fitted one of these which has a butchered up cat5 cable on the other side. It's all in a low current circuit, so cat5 works great :)

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Where are you? It makes a great backdrop to your Westfield.

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Left and right indicator.  Got the buttons from ebay here. Horn button works as normal too. I'm using this to connect the wheel/buttons to the dash where I fitted one of these which has a butchered up cat5 cable on the other side. It's all in a low current circuit, so cat5 works great :)

 

Thanks - not looked at what the current wiring is like nor how it is latched, connected etc but will save these - going to be a job for winter I think.

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The standard car wiring for indicators is just a "dumb" set up, ie it expects all the control logic to be done by the switch; by that I mean the wires just provide a feed to the indicators on either side of the car.

 

The existing switch does two things, it supplies power to the selected set of turn signals then disconnects power when turned off. And secondly, it interlocks by its design, ie which ever set of turn signals you select, it automatically cuts power to the other set*

 

*Hazard warning lights are a separate function, again taken care of "within" the hazard switch.

 

Quiten's neatly designed relay board takes care of the switching logic that's normally done mechanically in the toggle switch, allowing him to use a pair of momentary switches to control the relays.

 

Likewise, the commercially available indicator control boxes, like the Westfield supplied one, (that also do the auto cancel after a preset time), use momentary switches too.

 

The real beauty with momentary switches like this, is that within reason, you can use as many as you want. So you can have wheel mounted buttons, but still keep a dash mounted switch, if desired. (Just use a mom, off, mom toggle).

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I don't think Quinten went for a drive at all. He just rolled the car out and took some pictures in his front garden. Busted!

:)

 

Jen

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Kind of what I expected - dumb switches. Easy to understand and improve upon. Been a while since I've done electronic circuit design but will be good to refresh  :)

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Exactly, nothing to bypass or get in the way! (Not for just indicator control, anyway!)

 

Essentially, what you have is a permanent live feed to the flasher relay, this then supplies the hazard switch - this does some  route/re-routing so that with ignition on or off, it can feed the indicators, bypassing the indicator switch, it then feeds the indicator switch with a flashing turn signal, the switch then sends this to one bank of lights or the other. (Ok I know, you've fusing etc in there too!)

 

To just do what you want with the indicators and leave the hazards as is, you can literally just move those connections off the indicator switch and on to your own circuit.

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