Have you checked your ground?

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projo198

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I feel ya. Had a nightmare getting all the lights to work on my '76. Still needed some other things but my first step was adding ground straps to the motor, frame, cab and bed. You really can't "over" ground a vehicle.
 

Ricko1966

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Okay,as long as your frame,body and engine have a good ground to battery that's all you need. As long as all other grounds go to one of those 3 components you are in good shape. The frame body,or engine block can conduct more current than anything you would ever run through them,that's why GM did it that way. Don't believe me? Hook your positive starter lead to the block the block won't melt,you will burn off a battery post or cable. Same with the frame,same with the body,you will never exceed their ground capability.
 
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Jgonick

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But which way does electricity really flow? Positive to neg or Neg to pos?-:pp:- I know :roflbow:"conventional current".(even though it's wrong)
:p

If you are curious-LINK
 
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ChuckN

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I finished a re-wire of my 77 a few months back. One of the things I did was to completely create new grounding points with threaded studs and nuts/washers

1 - underneath bed between fuel tanks
1 - at rear fram
1 - at firewall, next to fuse block
1 - at driver side fender
1 - at driver side frame, next to block
1 - at passenger side frame, next to block

All of these ground points are daisy chained together using long battery cables with eyelets, bolted to the studs. Each stud can act as a grounding point. When I have something I need to ground, it just goes to the nearest stud and connected with another eyelet
I did something similar with out old ‘54 3100. The frame was pretty corroded being from Michigan, rust everywhere. Rather than rely on the frame for ground current, I ended up using a Ron Francis ground harness with connecting studs bolted to the frame intermittently, inside the rails and out of sight. I ran everything up to near the starter, put one major ground stud there and tied in all the other grounds (cab/body/engine) there, and ran a 0/1 gauge cable to the battery from there.

That said, it was a very simple vehicle to wire as it had no accessories and was even still on a generator- the only thing that was done (before me) was the conversion to 12V.
 

Camar068

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But which way does electricity really flow? Positive to neg or Neg to pos?-:pp:- I know :roflbow:"conventional current".(even though it's wrong)
:p

If you are curious-LINK
current flow is positive to negative, electron flow is opposite. Not going to get into it any further....google is you friend :)
 

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