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This information and page was created by Chris from Turbovan.com. He has kindly allowed me to post this information for the Datsun community. Datsun 1600/510 headlight rewiring The headlights on my Datsun 1600 were very poor, not nearly bright enough. The 30+ year old wiring and standard high beam relay weren't up to the job any more. I set about rewiring my lights and here is what I did. Stock headlight wiringThe stock Datsun 1600 headlight wiring is a strange setup. Someone had already fiddled with my wiring and installed a couple of extra relays. Here's what I gathered from studying the stock wiring on my '69 and a somewhat dodgy circuit diagram:
My rewiring planI wanted to completely replace the headlight wiring up to the headlights themselves, and eliminate the stock relay from the circuit entirely. I also had some spotlights which needed to be hooked up. I decided to run each pair of lights on a separate circuit for minimum voltage drop and maximum brightness. To allow for a future upgrade to 90/100W outers and 130W inners I designed a circuit which would cater for this amount of load.
Here is the design of my circuit: Here is the same design without spotlights if you don't have/want them: How it worksThe new circuit still uses a switched earth design to activate the relays. This is to minimise the number of changes needed to the original switches and wiring. The relays themselves however switch the conventional positive side of the headlights. The outer low beam headlights will come on when the stock switch is pulled out to the second position. Outers will switch to high beam and inners will come on when the dip switch is pulled back. Spotlights will also come on with the dip switch if the spotlight switch is on. The high beam and spotlight relay positive switch feeds are taken from the outer relay output. This ensures that high beams and spotlights turn off regardless of the dip switch position if you switch the main switch off. RelaysFor the 3 main relays I used Hella relays with built in 25amp blade fuse. These are really neat and make for a more compact installation as you don't need to use any in-line fuse holders. I couldn't find them in the local parts places so I ordered them from Autospeed (an Australian company). There is a diagram on the side of the relay so you can work out which pin is which, pins 85 and 86 are for the coil, pin 30 is +12v and pin 87 is the output. If you don't use relays with an in-built fuse holder, get some in-line fuse holders and put them between the battery and each relay. The switchover relay is needed to switch the outer lights from the low to high beam filament. I sourced this from Jaycar(an Australian company), part no SY-4070. WireFor the thick wires as shown on the diagram, use wire rated at 20 amps or higher. The thin wires can be much thinner as they will only flow a couple of hundred milliamps to drive the relays. InstallingI mounted the new relays on a piece of folded sheet steel on the driver's side near the battery. Being close to the battery is good as it gives the shortest cable runs and hence least voltage drop. Run new wires from the relay panel to both headlights. Make sure you secure the wires running from one side of the car to the other with some cable ties, you don't want to get them caught in the engine fan. Connecting it upI soldered each join to the factory loom and used heatshrink to cover the joins. You can use crimp connectors if you don't have a soldering iron. Use crimp connectors for the relay connections. Test each crimp connector by trying to pull the wire out, ratchet type crimpers work best. Spot lightsStarting with the easiest, connect the positive output from the relay to the spotlights. The spotlights will probably earth through their own mounts, but you may need to run an earth wire. Inner beamsIf you look at the headlight plugs, you will see that the inner headlights are connected directly to the outer headlights. In the stock setup they both run from the same circuit. This setup will give them separate circuits, so you can cut both these wires close to the outer beam. Connect one of the wires (either one) to a good earth nearby. Connect the other wire to the inner beam relay output as shown in the diagram. Outer beamThe outer beam plug has three wires. One is for the low beam filament, one is for the high beam filament, and one is common. The one wire which did not run to the inners is the low beam, connect this to the switchover relay as shown in the diagram. On my car the red wire with no trace was the ground wire. You can identify this before you start by measuring which pin has close to 0V with the headlights turned on. Connect the ground wire to a good earth nearby. Connect the remaining wire to the switchover relay output as shown in the diagram. Headlight switchUnscrew the headlight switch from the dash and have a look on the back of the switch. There are a number of terminals with wires soldered onto them. Now you need to locate the pin which is switched to ground only when the switch is pulled out to the second position (we only want parking lights on in the first position). This is the middle contact closest to the switch plunger, you can verify by measuring resistance to earth with a multimeter if you wish. Cut the wire leading to this contact, this becomes your main light switch wire as show in the diagram. Ignore all the other wires, they are for your parking and illumination lights which will be unaffected. Dip SwitchThe dip switch wiring emerges near the ignition key in a square shaped plug. The black and red wire is for the dip switch. Cut this wire and it becomes your dip switch feed as show on the diagram. You can then solder a new wire onto the dip switch wire and run it to your relay panel. Spotlight switch wireFind a suitable spot to mount your spotlight switch and wire it up as shown. Routing the wiresUnscrew the fuse box and feed the wires through the existing rubber grommet. You can then feed them through the passage where the bonnet cable runs. This emerges right near where you will mount the relay panel so makes the wiring quite neat. Finishing upYou can now remove the stock headlight relay, it is on the strut tower near the fuse box, closest to the engine. Cover the plug with insulation tape. Also tape up the ends of the stock wires that are no longer used. VariationsIf you don't want to go as far as I did, you can use only two relays and wire the inners straight to the outers as per the stock setup. Just ignore the inner beam wiring on the diagram and wire up the rest as shown. Make sure the relays you use are rated at least to the total load your lights will draw. DisclaimerPlease don't blame me if your setup differs and you blow things up! Send me an email if you have any questions :) chris@turbovan.com |