Chris in the guide I received it did not mention anything about load resistors, only heat sinks. Can you help me understand this load resistor issue better?
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Chris in the guide I received it did not mention anything about load resistors, only heat sinks. Can you help me understand this load resistor issue better?
What parts do you need help on?
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The reisitors how do I identify them so I know where the are in relation to stuff that might melt.
Confirmed.
Gound white line with green strip... works like a charm.
Cut off the load resistors... cap off the tips with tape.
Lights still work.. and no nag light on dash.
Confirmed.
Gound white line with green strip... works like a charm.
Cut off the load resistors... cap off the tips with tape.
Lights still work.. and no nag light on dash.
Ok! I found a quick and easy solution with everyone's help...
I just cut the resistor off of the socket nearest the harness on the passenger side. I determined which of the wires was the ground (which is connected to the side of the 'barrel'.... I stripped the end off of this one and slid it into the harness connector in the pin 1 position (described in earlier posts). I could have soldered it in place, but just decided to be lazy and tape everything with a mountain of electrical tape.
problem solved.
I couldn't have done this without everyone's help.
I left the blinker resistors in... thinking that this may prevent the dreaded 'hyper blinking.'
In summary, this eliminates the use of 4 of the load resistors. The warning light does not go off. The excess heat problem is solved. Only one bulb base is used and this should shave a couple of bucks off of Chris' production costs.
So Chris are the resistors needed for the blinkers (turn signals)to prevent hyperblinking or are they only needed to satisfy the system for the light out indication ?
The original system used 6 load resistors...
How did you determine the value of the load resistor? i.e. resistance, wattage.
I really feel the need to chime in here....
IMHO, the load resistors are only necessary for the turn signals. Because they are intermittant at best, the resistors should not get hot.
But the other four resistors serve no real purpose other than to 'trick' the dash warning light not to go off. The downside is that the resistors reportedly get hot.
By grounding Pin 1 on the passenger side wiring harness as described in earlier posts, you can eliminate the 4 resistors altogether and still not have the dash warning light. The grounding of the pin can be easily accomplished in minutes, and you need not worry about the heat problem.
BTW, I watched my car get driven off to spend the winter down south.... the lights really look awesome!
dont let this discussion about the resistors dissuade you from getting this mod!
I really feel the need to chime in here....
IMHO, the load resistors are only necessary for the turn signals. Because they are intermittant at best, the resistors should not get hot.
But the other four resistors serve no real purpose other than to 'trick' the dash warning light not to go off. The downside is that the resistors reportedly get hot.
By grounding Pin 1 on the passenger side wiring harness as described in earlier posts, you can eliminate the 4 resistors altogether and still not have the dash warning light. The grounding of the pin can be easily accomplished in minutes, and you need not worry about the heat problem.
BTW, I watched my car get driven off to spend the winter down south.... the lights really look awesome!
dont let this discussion about the resistors dissuade you from getting this mod!
In basic electrical design, the resistor is for current limiting. In fact, the generally accepted rule is to NEVER use an LED without some sort of current control (i.e. active current source, current-limiting resistor, etc.)
The reason for this is that LEDs will pull as much current as they can… and if allowed to do that, several BAD things can happen. They can burn-out immediately, they will generally run hotter than normal resulting in a limited life, and they can even catch fire. Not using some form of current limiting can also put your wiring at risk.
In some cases, batches of LEDs (like in the application here) you can have uneven illumination where some LEDs glow brighter than others.
LEDs want to see a particular current. Doing otherwise, the LEDs will not operate as specified.
I have these in my '00... in the newer cars you cannot eliminate the resistor on the turn signals there is no flasher mod solution. All my resistors get hot, they are meant to bleed-off about 50~60 watts of energy in the form of heat to make the circuit have the correct resistance & current for the bulb out warning. I want to stress they do get hot enough to melt things. I have not tried to take pin1 to ground, will not tinker until I look at the circuit to find out what it does before it damages something.
I sure hope it doesn't damage anything!
a whole lot of information can be found on this thread, I hope it helps!
http://www.nsxprime.com/forums/showthread.php?t=19896
please let us know if I am advocating something damaging! that is the furthest from my intention!