Upfitter #2 BD S8 30 Fuse Blowing

Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.

The Car Stereo Company

aka grumpy car stereo guy and frf rolodex
Supporting Member
Joined
Jul 8, 2012
Posts
32,739
Reaction score
23,897
Location
here, on frf
anytime you reach 75-80% of a circuits maximum, you need to use a relay. standard automotive relays are rated for 30-40amps. the reason behind this rule is that heat plays a role in electricity. ever see a circuit breaker under the hood of a car for an amplifier? even though its rated at 150amp it will pop sooner because of the fact of the heat. same situation here. the engine bay gets hot. heat is the byproduct of electricity. the more heat, the less electricity. so at 12 amps you are >75% of the circuits max. and being that its dc current, you will generate a fair amount of heat in the wire. plus the heat from the engine. it all can add up to exceeding what the light tells you.

granted you have all your wiring correct, a relay will provide higher current. every light in my truck has a relay. it reduces the stress on the circuit as well. powering a relay requires as little as 5 miliamps instead of 12+ amps for your light. so as long as you are wired correctly, i suggest a relay.
 

wheelman55

Full Access Member
Joined
Feb 4, 2016
Posts
938
Reaction score
505
Location
Big Bend or MN
My simple understanding. Electrical circuits get derated for length and heat. And length actually causes heat. Go figure.

Length - think of length as adding drag to the flow of electrons. With too long of a wire you could actually have little to no electrons flowing. You can defeat this by either using bigger gauge wires or by making your wire run shorter. In a nutshell too long of a wire run leads to derating of ampacity.

Heat. Wires are rated to specific ambient air temps. Go above the heat spec and you need to derate ampacity. Heat is also caused by coiling the wire, and/or by having too many wires in a conductor or too many in a tight bundle.

Your fuse blowing is a safety thing. Without the fuse the heat could build and cause a fire.

It sounds like you did two things to help…you decreased the length of your wire run and removed a coiled length of wire.

FYI. Car Stereo guy knows what he’s doing. Take the rest of our comments with a grain or two of salt. There is a guy named Tony Candella who has written some good books on automotive wiring.

Here‘s a link to Tony’s website: https://ceautoelectricsupply.com/wiring-and-efi-conversion-books/
 

Oldfart

FRF Addict
Joined
Oct 21, 2017
Posts
6,031
Reaction score
14,970
Location
Saggy Balls Division of PA Trump Army

The Car Stereo Company

aka grumpy car stereo guy and frf rolodex
Supporting Member
Joined
Jul 8, 2012
Posts
32,739
Reaction score
23,897
Location
here, on frf
My simple understanding. Electrical circuits get derated for length and heat. And length actually causes heat. Go figure.

Length - think of length as adding drag to the flow of electrons. With too long of a wire you could actually have little to no electrons flowing. You can defeat this by either using bigger gauge wires or by making your wire run shorter. In a nutshell too long of a wire run leads to derating of ampacity.

Heat. Wires are rated to specific ambient air temps. Go above the heat spec and you need to derate ampacity. Heat is also caused by coiling the wire, and/or by having too many wires in a conductor or too many in a tight bundle.

Your fuse blowing is a safety thing. Without the fuse the heat could build and cause a fire.

It sounds like you did two things to help…you decreased the length of your wire run and removed a coiled length of wire.

FYI. Car Stereo guy knows what he’s doing. Take the rest of our comments with a grain or two of salt. There is a guy named Tony Candella who has written some good books on automotive wiring.

Here‘s a link to Tony’s website: https://ceautoelectricsupply.com/wiring-and-efi-conversion-books/
great info in this post. i didnt think to mention the gauge of wire since it was the wire that came with the light. but @wheelman55 makes good and accurate points
 
OP
OP
OEMPlus Raptor

OEMPlus Raptor

OEM preferred....
Joined
Aug 17, 2020
Posts
1,075
Reaction score
1,146
Location
Oxnard CA
@OEMPlus Raptor Did you figure out this issue? I'm having the same experience. My upfitter 1 fuse blows after 10-15 min.
No I didn't it, it hasn't blown in awhile. It would only blow the fuse while offroading and rough terrain. What I did change was the ground. I'm grounded to the battery now. Not sure if that worked but it hasn't blown the fuse. Worth a shot, let us know if that corrects the problem.
 

smurfslayer

Be vewwy, vewwy quiet. We’re hunting sasquatch77
Joined
Dec 16, 2016
Posts
17,714
Reaction score
27,343
that sound a lot like an unsecured connection.
 
Top