Joe:
The important thing is to be systematic in your trouble
shooting. It is impossible to give much in the way of specifics since
your wiring is so non-standard.
I would first disconnect the connections at the horns, install a
fresh fuse and see if it still blows. If not, you know one of the horns
is bad. You can then them isolate one at a time to see which one is
misbehaving.
If the fuse still blows, disconnect the coil on the horn relay,
install a fresh fuse and try again. If it still blows, you have a
problem between the horn button and the relay. If not, try replacing the
relay.
That is all I can suggest. That and a volt/ohm meter to look for
shorts.
Vance
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-6pack@autox.team.net [mailto:owner-6pack@autox.team.net] On
Behalf Of Lizirbydavis@cs.com
Sent: August 10, 2006 5:34 PM
To: 6pack@autox.team.net
Subject: horn blowing fuses
Everytime I hit the horn, the fuse blows. The system has historically
worked
fine since installing two new horns from moss and a new relay. I feel
the
relay vibrating, and buzzing, but nothing whatsoever from the horns. If
I press
the horn for more than a few seconds, the fuse blows. ANy ideas? The
stock
fuse block is cluttered with OD (it's own relay), electric fan (also has
it's
own relay), radio, and fog lamps. I've not made any changes for a long
time.
Joe Davis
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