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- | == Headlight Socket == | + | = Headlight Socket = |
Headlight socket<table border=1 borderwidth=1 bordercolor=black cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2> | Headlight socket<table border=1 borderwidth=1 bordercolor=black cellspacing=0 cellpadding=2> | ||
<tr bgcolor="ccccff"><td>B</td><td>Ground</td><td>body connection</td></tr> | <tr bgcolor="ccccff"><td>B</td><td>Ground</td><td>body connection</td></tr> |
Revision as of 06:35, 11 January 2010
Datsun B110 headlights are fused through the fuse box. No relays are used. Original Specs for headlights are 50/40 watt (standard large round headlights). From the fuse box "Battery" side (always hot, not dependent on ignition key position), through a 15-amp fuse the circuit goes to the Light Switch. From the Light Switch it goes to the Dimmer switch on the column. From here -- depending on the position of the Dimmer lever position -- it goes to either the low (DIM) beam of the headlights or the high (MAIN) beam of the headlights.
Also see: Headlight Specifications
Contents |
Overview
The headlights are grounded via the main wiring harness.
Completing the headlight features is the "High Beam" light in the instrument panel. This is connected to the high-beam circuit to light up a visual indicator on the dash when the high beams are on.
So the headlight circuit has these components:
- Two identical headlights
- (Standard 12V "large round" type used by all makes of older vehicles)
- 15A Fuse in fuse box
- Light Switch
- Dimmer switch (T/S & Light Switch on steering column)
- High-beam indicator lamp in instrument panel
- Wiring and connectors
- Relays are NOT used
Earthing
The headlights are grounded via the main wiring harness.
Circuits USA
Light Switch
With the knob pushed in, no circuits are connected.
With knob pulled out to Position one, the parking lamps are activated
With knob pulled out to Position two, parking + headlights are activated
OFF | no connections |
Pull stop 1 (halfway out) |
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Pull stop 2 (all the way out) |
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R | Headlight hot feed Input
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R | Headlight circuit hot Output
|
n/a | no connection |
n/a | no connection |
GL | parking lights hot feed
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GL | parking lights circuit output
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Low/High Beam Circuit
With the T/S lever pulled back, power goes to Low beams
With the T/S lever pushed forward, power goes to High beams
RY | Headlight hot feed |
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RB | headlight low-beam |
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RW | headlight high-beam |
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Headlight Socket
Headlight socketB | Ground | body connection |
RW | (high beam) to one RW terminal of Dimmer Switch | only powered if Dimmer lever is forward |
RB | (low beam) to RB terminal of Dimmer switch | only powered if Dimmer lever is back |
Australia
light switch - Australia
With the knob pushed in, no circuits are connected.
With knob pulled out to Position one (POSH) you are simply smashing
With knob pulled out to Position two (POLL) you are just common
With knob TWISTED, the dash lights are bright or dim
Passing Light Switch
A passing light feature was an option for B110. If your turn-signal lever has a push-button on the end, it's the passing light switch. Push it in, and the headlights light while it's pushed in (regardless of whether lights are on or off).
This is composed of two parts:
- The switch itself is part of the turn signal (on the steering column).
- The relay. 1200s don't use headlight relays, except for this optional Passing Switch. It looks very much like the Horn Relay.
Note that this just wires in series with the standard wiring. From the 'L' fuse to the high-beam wiring, the switch bypasses simply the regular switch, firing the Main Beams.
- The red circle indicates the part of the T/S switch that is different from a normal T/S switch
Relay
Most cars use a headlight relay, to keep high power from going through the headlight and dimmer switches. You may add a relay to the Datsun 1200 to improve the power to the headlights. Some club members report the headlights are much brighter when wired up this way.
Harness Kit
If you have more money than time, an Relay wiring kit is really easy:
Take the new harness:
- Connect HOT wire
- Ground/earth the relays
- Plug into existing headlight connector
- Plug harness into headlights
Your'e Done! Only $129 USD Painless Wiring Headlight Harness with relays