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I’ve got the wire your talking about run correctly from battery to that block. I still have these 2 wires that are kind of pointless right now. I fixed the burnt wires and I still have nothing. Starting to get aggravated lolThat long wire that runs from the positive battery terminal along side the starter cable down to the starter (but does NOT attach to anything) then goes back up to that terminal block is the HOT wire from the alternator that charges your batteries! Yup! That convoluted mess is a ROYAL P.I.T.A.! When GM relocated the alternator from DS to PS, that wire became about 12" long from the back of the alternator to the PS positive battery to starter cable end.
Yes there is a fusible link in that wire, both the old style and the new. Use a VOM to check continuity/resistance of that charging wire. I suspecf that the link is open and that the P.O. jerry-rigged that jumper/switch assembly to bypass the open link, but in doing so managed to miswire it so that when it was turned 'On' to allow the alternator to charge the batteries when the engine was running, it instead back-fed voltage to the starter solenoid and engaged the starter (possibly with the motor running) and fried the starter.
I can NOT stress enough the need for you to get a genuine GM Service manual wiring diagram for that vehicle before going willy-nilly at an attempt to diagnose/repair your wiring issues.
All I have is a test light, better then nothing but not a meter. Need to buy a punching bag lol but I've nearly eliminated most of the aftermarket crap. Got a couple more ideas of places to check. Going to get a different starter to just to eliminate that and then just starting chasing every wire.Na, using an old extension cord in a way that it has a full thermal melt down is electrical engineering at its best!
Dude, I feel for ya. But imo you need to remove every after market piece of wire from that truck. Rip off all the looming and tape to find out what is left useable and replace all the damage. It is time consuming and annoying as heck, but that part is only labor.
You mentioned your Dad’s truck- finding out what is missing or dead leads to duplicating the original harness. Not sure if any of the truck aftermarket companies make harnesses for your rig or not. But would be worth looking into if it is really bad. Otherwise- duplicate your Dad’s truck if it is same options and era.
The factory harness and design wasn’t horrible. Just laking in a couple areas like grounding. But I don’t even mess with the factory harness for that- just run external ground loop from batteries to frame, body, engine. Pmd relocation as needed, and inline relay on the ops sensor circuit.
If you have a good multi meter- good. A power probe 3 master kit is even better- best automotive electrical tool ever invented. A punching bag is the second.
Many people get scared off by electrical nightmares. If this is a truck you dont need in a rush- it’s the best thing for you. You’ll fight through it, but when done will have the whole truck’s system corrected and you will sail through future problems on other rigs.
Ok, tomorrow I will go over everything you gave me and let you know what I've got. Going to wire starter back factory. I have the wire run from the pas. battery to that bus and have good power there. (Yes my test light is 12v) Where the burnt wires were with that relay, I took that out and hooked that purple wire back together. I have no juice to the fuse block though, although when I press rcl on radio it displays time, but when I hit power it wont turn on. If back doors are opened, the roof light comes on. Also if you press buttons on roof light it will turn on. Gonna do a WHOOOOLE bunch of back-to-factory wiring tomorrow lol. I'll let you know what I've got in the morning.Wrote the above missing a page. Stupidphone... That Motorola is a radio. It can be removed. The relay is not stock so it can be gone.
A test light will work. Is it the kind that lights up on 12v from the battery? If so: I would work on getting 12v to the fuse block in the cab. You need to pull and inspect every fuse one at a time.
The passenger side battery provides power to the bus on the passenger side firewall. It shorts out on the battery tray and GM stupidly ran it by the starter where the manifold heat melts insulation off and another short. I run a replacement under the air filter from battery to bus bar on passenger firewall.
Once I fixed the burnt wire I have power to the fuse block and dash but the starter still doesn't engage and it pops the fuse I added. Any ideas? Do I need to keep going through the harness?sounds like a another short in the wiring. starter wire should have minimal amperage going thru it as the selenoid on the starter carries the main amperage
I had to cut it out to splice new wire in, thats why I added that fuse thereyes. that white thing in the picture on the wire is a fusible link I believe
Do I need to take the fuse part of and just splice the wire back together? Can I go buy a new fusable link?A fuse CAN’T take the place of a fuseable link wire.
Ensure the starter works proper before replacing the fuseable link.