Warning switch for lights
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It should say as a stolen sound clip from Dad's Army - spoken by the annoying warden - "Oi Turn those B****y Lights out"
Probably doable too - think about it a birthday card can sing you a song - you just need to find a way of flashing the memory of one of those things..
Over to Alex holden territory methinks !
Probably doable too - think about it a birthday card can sing you a song - you just need to find a way of flashing the memory of one of those things..
Over to Alex holden territory methinks !
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Don't suppose you can suggest the easiest place to find and break into the courtesy light wire to link to the buzzer and install the diode
Drivers (RH, off) side. A black wire, IIRC, running down/up the pillar then under/behind the 'box linerI think the wire comes down one of the windscreen supports but I'm not sure which side.
a
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This ought to do it: http://www.mutr.co.uk/catalog/product_i ... cts_id=779Orkney wrote:Probably doable too - think about it a birthday card can sing you a song - you just need to find a way of flashing the memory of one of those things..
I would power it from its own battery pack and use another small relay to isolate it from the vehicle power (you get lots of nasty surges in a car that will easily fry unprotected electronics).


Alex Holden - http://www.alexholden.net/
If it doesn't work, you're not hitting it with a big enough hammer.
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Do convertibles have a switch in the A post? If not you could probably fit one quite easily.overider wrote:How do you connect one into a convertible?![]()
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Alex Holden - http://www.alexholden.net/
If it doesn't work, you're not hitting it with a big enough hammer.
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Isn't that one of the ways you tell a real one from a conversion? The real ones have a courtesy light in the A post, and the conversions don't?Do convertibles have a switch in the A post?
Cheers, Axolotl.

I know that you believe you understand what you think I wrote, but I am not sure you realize that what you read is not what I meant.
I know that you believe you understand what you think I wrote, but I am not sure you realize that what you read is not what I meant.
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Yes that correct Axolotl, dont realy want to make it look like a chop top.Axolotl wrote:Isn't that one of the ways you tell a real one from a conversion? The real ones have a courtesy light in the A post, and the conversions don't?Do convertibles have a switch in the A post?

I was only throwing the cat among the pigeons,



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It's the other way round. The real convertibles don't have a switch as there was never an interior light. The choptops have one because they did have a light (before the roof was removed).
I was going to fit a switch but I'm not familiar with the panels between the a-post behind the wing and the flitch panel so I can't work out how to get the wiring through and keep it weather proof etc.
I was going to fit a switch but I'm not familiar with the panels between the a-post behind the wing and the flitch panel so I can't work out how to get the wiring through and keep it weather proof etc.
Older and more confused than I could ever imagine possible.
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The bit it screws into on the non-convertibles is a double skin that's open at the top. You just take the glovebox liner out and poke the wire down from above.Peetee wrote:I was going to fit a switch but I'm not familiar with the panels between the a-post behind the wing and the flitch panel so I can't work out how to get the wiring through and keep it weather proof etc.


Alex Holden - http://www.alexholden.net/
If it doesn't work, you're not hitting it with a big enough hammer.
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Sorry Peetee you are right I miss read. The true convertible does not have the interior light. That was the idea of asking how you fit the buzzer in a convertible.Peetee wrote:It's the other way round. The real convertibles don't have a switch as there was never an interior light. The choptops have one because they did have a light (before the roof was removed).
I was going to fit a switch but I'm not familiar with the panels between the a-post behind the wing and the flitch panel so I can't work out how to get the wiring through and keep it weather proof etc.



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Mea culpa. I don't know where my brain was when I wrote that. Obviously, the car with no light would be the car with no switchIt's the other way round.

However, returning to the original topic, Maurice now has a "lights on" warning buzzer

Based on Alex's circuit, with two slight mods.
First, I took the power for the buzzer from the panel light circuit instead of the side lights.
That means that everything else works the same, because the panel lights are only live when side or headlights are on but if I want to leave the sidelights on, when parked on a dark night, for instance, I can turn the panel lights off to save power, and the buzzer won't sound when I get out.
Second, as I mentioned above somewhere, I hooked into the wire to the drivers door switch only (they're brown wires on my car), not the one from the courtesy light. That way, the buzzer only sounds if the driver's door opens, so I can let passengers out or use the manual light switch in peace.
For what it is worth, here's the made-up harness, prior to installation.
The black wire with the bullet connectors goes into the courtesy light earthing circuit to the driver's door switch. The two diodes are the suspicious bulges in the black wire, hidden by heatshrink. I taped the supply wires to the buzzer to give them a bit of support, as they are extremely thin. I might tape over the buzzer itself, because it is a bit loud at the moment.
The black and red wires on the relay piggyback onto the ignition supply on an existing relay that operates a dummy alarm LED when the ignition is off, and the green wire goes to the panel lights via a "chocolate block" that's used to power my add-on instrument lights from the panel light circuit.
All the wiring is accessible behind my instrument cluster, which is on a bolt-in panel across the driver's side glovebox.
Everest is climbed!
I didn't pursue the voice message option, because all the voice recorders I can find are switched mechanically, not electrically, so it wasn't possible to build them into the circuit in place of the buzzer. (At least with my level of knowledge of electronics.)
Cheers, Axolotl.

I know that you believe you understand what you think I wrote, but I am not sure you realize that what you read is not what I meant.
I know that you believe you understand what you think I wrote, but I am not sure you realize that what you read is not what I meant.