Bextreme04
Full Access Member
- Joined
- May 13, 2019
- Posts
- 4,439
- Reaction score
- 5,581
- Location
- Oregon
- First Name
- Eric
- Truck Year
- 1980
- Truck Model
- K25
- Engine Size
- 350-4bbl
They sell auto resetting CB that fit in a fuse spot. I would get one of those instead of another fuse. They are the two silver rectangular ones you already have in your fuse box.And yes, I do have the 30a removed, just have to go to the parts store today to get a 10a because of course....I have a 5, 15, 20 and a 25 in my drawer. Lol.
This reminds me of a truck that I worked on when I was a contractor in Afghanistan for the Marines. They had a truck that was parked for months waiting on an entire chassis harness to come in, because the headlights didn't work. The marines had hard wired a 10 gauge wire from the battery box, to a loose open switch zip-tied to a hole in the dash, then out directly to the headlights(which they had cut the connector off of and then open butt-crimped the wires too). They finally parked the truck because when they were driving across the desert at night the switch would touch the metal dash and spark all over the place. They had no breakers or fuses anywhere.
I ended up ripping all of that out, then putting new headlights in so that I could actually plug them into the harness, then troubleshooting why the lights didn't work. It turned out to be a bad resettable circuit breaker(they use them instead of fuses on the oshkosh military trucks). So they had a $250k military truck parked in the motorpool for months, then almost burned it to the ground, then ordered another $6k wiring harness for it... all because they couldn't properly isolate the real fault in the first place. It would have only cost them a $2 resettable breaker and 5 minutes of troubleshooting with a multimeter the first time.
All that to say... don't go too far down the rabbit hole here. Get the wiring schematics for your specific truck and trace the wiring to find where the original problem occurred. Don't think that you need to be stuck with whatever BS the original owner saddled you with.