Morris 1100 wrote:
Are you running the stock headlights or is it running H4s with bright globes?
Either way it is a good idea to fit relays to the headlight circuit to reduce the load on the switch.
On this, you have an opportunity here to kill two birds with one stone and save yourself 130 dollars. If you take your working low beam wire(Blue/Red) and use it to operate a changeover relay (has one normally open and one normally closed contact) you can drop the load your indicator assembly has to carry from 16 amps down to less than 0.05 amps and continue to use the current indicator arm.
If you would like to go down this path, you can do the following:
1.Buy a changeover relay from an auto shop (less than 20bux...ish?).
2.Connect the blue/red wire
FROM the indicator arm to terminal number 86 and (the numbers are generic to each relay),
3.connect blue/red (
from the headlights) to terminal 87
4. connect blue/white (
from the headlights) to terminal 87a
5. Create a wire which connects to the blue wire from the light switch. Don't interrupt its path however to the indicator stalk, keep it connected. Connect this tail to terminal 30.
6. connect terminal 85 to ground. Easiest to simply loop it under the bolt you will mount the relay on.
The old low beam wire will now turn a relay on and off. The relay when it is off will cause the highbeams to come on, and when the relay is on will cause low beam to turn on. It can be improved by installing a second relay to remove the full load current from the switch as well, but this will get you out of trouble without a new indicator arm being needed.