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Light wiring

Discussion in '1st Gen. Tacomas (1995-2004)' started by Rukus, Mar 14, 2017.

  1. Mar 14, 2017 at 5:45 PM
    #1
    Rukus

    Rukus [OP] Member

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    I just installed a pair of ipf lights on my trucks bullbar. I wired them in to the high beams but am having second guesses. If I wired them to the running lights I could use them either with or without my high beams on.. the way I have it wired I need my high beams on to run the fogs. Not much help in the fog. Thoughts? How does everyone else have them wired?
     
  2. Mar 14, 2017 at 5:47 PM
    #2
    GHOST SHIP

    GHOST SHIP hates you.

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    Have you considered a separate harness/switch? Maximum flexibility and you can turn them on whenever you'd like.
     
    mechanicjon likes this.
  3. Mar 14, 2017 at 7:13 PM
    #3
    Rukus

    Rukus [OP] Member

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    I wired the switch for them right in to the high beam wire in the drivers side headlight. how would I wore them completely separately?
     
  4. Mar 14, 2017 at 7:17 PM
    #4
    Bocsy44

    Bocsy44 Well-Known Member

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    This that and the other thing.
    well, depending on the amp draw of the lights, you could wire from battery to the switch or any ACC +12v power supply then to the fogs. or better yet wire in a relay. a little safer since the relay can handle more amp draw then a switch can. again, depends on the amp draw of the lights. you can turn them on when ever you want
     
  5. Mar 14, 2017 at 7:28 PM
    #5
    frizzman

    frizzman Well-Known Member

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    if you are using a switch + relay this is the correct method as factory "fog" lights should only be able to come on when the headlights are on. when high beams or headlights off you can't use them. check with your inspection rules to make sure they will not flag you if done incorrectly.

    otherwise as suggested use the running lights wire to the relay. If you only have a wire from the headlight to the switch you are seriously drawing too much electric and will cause problems
     
  6. Mar 15, 2017 at 7:37 AM
    #6
    GHOST SHIP

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    Not your only option, but probably the easiest since it would be "plug and play":
    https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00O72R7Z8
    Pos/neg leads to the battery and to the lights and run the switch to your desired location in or on the truck.


    BTW, you say you wired the switch into the highbeam wire? Do you mean to say you installed a switch in your cab separate from the high bean switch on the column and connected that to the high beam wire? Semantics might be confusing to some here that are trying to help.
     
  7. Mar 15, 2017 at 5:16 PM
    #7
    Rukus

    Rukus [OP] Member

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    Yes exactly. I have a separate switch in the cab.
     
  8. Mar 16, 2017 at 6:26 PM
    #8
    frizzman

    frizzman Well-Known Member

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    do you have that switch connected to a relay? Or does the wire go from the headlight wire > switch > lights > ground?
     
  9. Mar 17, 2017 at 2:08 AM
    #9
    Rukus

    Rukus [OP] Member

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    To the relay first. I just want to be able to use my lights without needing my high beams on.
     
  10. Mar 17, 2017 at 12:20 PM
    #10
    frizzman

    frizzman Well-Known Member

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    ok. then you need to switch the wire coming from your headlight wire to the running light wire. I can't remember the color off hand but maybe someone can chime in that has a diagram.

    or you can run it straight from the battery and by pass needing to have lights on at all, but I think this would be less ideal.
     
  11. Mar 17, 2017 at 2:15 PM
    #11
    Rukus

    Rukus [OP] Member

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    Right on, thanks!
     
  12. Mar 18, 2017 at 3:03 AM
    #12
    butsack

    butsack Well-Known Member

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    does anyone have "day time running lights?"
    my stock 97 regular cab has a small metal switch below the steering wheel which toggles the headlights to behave automatically.
    the switch doesn't look stock but I have been led to believe by people who have no reason to mislead me, that this was a stock option in 97...
    :confused:
     
  13. Mar 18, 2017 at 3:41 AM
    #13
    RysiuM

    RysiuM Well-Known Member

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    DRL version of Tacoma has completely different circuit from non-DRL version. Maybe you have DRL version and the add-on switch is "cutting off" the famous "white green wire" disabling DRL. Because of the DRL circuit complexity it is easier to disable DRL in "DRL version" than adding DRL to "non-DRL version".
     
  14. Mar 18, 2017 at 8:25 AM
    #14
    frizzman

    frizzman Well-Known Member

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    I could be wrong but I don't think DRL was available until '00 or '01 model? Not saying you can retrofit it but the circuits would be different for the years
     
  15. Mar 18, 2017 at 8:33 AM
    #15
    Clearwater Bill

    Clearwater Bill Never answer an anonymous letter

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    OP, as others suggest, separate wiring is best. Then they are in your control.

    If they are really fog lights, you'd only want to run them with low beams anyway, as the trucks with fogs are wired to do. High beams are bad news in fog conditions

    If you are using some kind of driving light, you don't want them on in the fog, but you would with high beams.
     
  16. Mar 18, 2017 at 1:27 PM
    #16
    RysiuM

    RysiuM Well-Known Member

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    DRL was standard in Canadian version since the day one (I mean since 95). Still the DRL version had quite complicated headlight circuit including DRL control unit (black box), DRL resistor and few more relays. In 95 non DRL Tacoma the headlight circuit is quite "primitive" and the thing I don't like at all is that the whole headlight current (that is 9Amp) goes through headlight switch instead of being switched by relay.
     

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