I'm finally getting back into it. I've always liked older cars and have the thought that anything new or fancy that I want I can add. Most of the things manufacturers tout as benefits I don't like, and I tend to be very vocal about that and generally grumpy about not being able to turn off things like 'lane departure avoidance', 'park assist', or 'auto locking doors'. Add that to the fact that I really don't care at all about the safety of the vehicle (young, invincible, bachelor) then building an older car up with all the upgrades that I can think of sounds like a great idea! Right now my daily driver is a 2003 dodge stratus with completely dry rotted and patched tires, no brake pads, bottomed out suspension, front fascia falling off, but I recently replaced the outer tie rod ends (one fell off while driving) and the throttle position sensor (racing engine at stops) and filled the coolant full of stop-leak which surprisingly worked. I have no intention to fix that car and have given myself a deadline of whenever the dodge falls apart on the road to get the Eagle to daily-driver condition (it drives now, but it could stand to be more reliable).
My original thread is
here and I'm now going to keep a project thread that I can update regularly in parallel with my
blog. The current project is an LED headlight upgrade (and other lights while I'm there) and should be up tonight. I'm certain my placement of the new headlight relays is inadvisable, but until I build my own harness the one I got from e-bay will do.
First question I can think of: any idea where to get the connectors for the diagnostic harness? I think I can find the pinout but I would like to build a proper harness to a tester.
The air cleaner makes a nice laptop stand where I could watch Brazil while working on the wiring.