Lateknightucd
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Patrick
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2023
- Threads
- 5
- Messages
- 79
- Reaction score
- 328
- Location
- Grand Rapids, MI
- Vehicle(s)
- 2023 Ranger Lariat Jungle Edition
- Occupation
- Medical Compliance
- Thread starter
- #1
I know we have quite a few lighting...enthusiasts here so I wanted to pose a few questions.
I have an AuxBeam 6 switch panel already wired up and working with a pair of Diode Dynamics fogs with the amber backlights. Currently the backlight and the fogs are on two separate switches. The DD lights handle turning off the backlights when the fogs are turned on. I'll be moving the backlight to the DRL trigger in the future.
For bed lighting, I have 6 DD 1" x 2" pods in white with amber backlights. The plan is 2 left, 2 right, and 2 rear for scene/utility lighting while camping with the backlights for general camp ambiance. Each "zone" will be switched separately with the backlights tied together on a fourth switch. So I'll basically need four "hots" and four grounds coming out of the engine bay/relay box. I'm most used to residential electrical work so I have a question in automotive wiring. Should I rig up some sort of junction box with a heavier gauge ground coming up along with the switched hots for the various zones (i.e. five wires coming from the engine bay) with each light connecting into a bus bar for its respective hot and ground? Or am I overthinking it and should just tie everything together and stash it all in the T-channel of the Xtrusion Overland rack and cover it up? I know in residential wiring a sub-panel is pretty common but I'm not sure if I'm making this harder on myself than I need to. I'm really just curious how best to tie together six ground or backlight wires into one knowing that I don't want to run from each light pod all the way forward.
Thanks!
I have an AuxBeam 6 switch panel already wired up and working with a pair of Diode Dynamics fogs with the amber backlights. Currently the backlight and the fogs are on two separate switches. The DD lights handle turning off the backlights when the fogs are turned on. I'll be moving the backlight to the DRL trigger in the future.
For bed lighting, I have 6 DD 1" x 2" pods in white with amber backlights. The plan is 2 left, 2 right, and 2 rear for scene/utility lighting while camping with the backlights for general camp ambiance. Each "zone" will be switched separately with the backlights tied together on a fourth switch. So I'll basically need four "hots" and four grounds coming out of the engine bay/relay box. I'm most used to residential electrical work so I have a question in automotive wiring. Should I rig up some sort of junction box with a heavier gauge ground coming up along with the switched hots for the various zones (i.e. five wires coming from the engine bay) with each light connecting into a bus bar for its respective hot and ground? Or am I overthinking it and should just tie everything together and stash it all in the T-channel of the Xtrusion Overland rack and cover it up? I know in residential wiring a sub-panel is pretty common but I'm not sure if I'm making this harder on myself than I need to. I'm really just curious how best to tie together six ground or backlight wires into one knowing that I don't want to run from each light pod all the way forward.
Thanks!
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