d0xyl
Member
- Thread starter
- #1
I have an Auxbeam switch/controller system that I need to connect to an ignition-only fuse in order to detect if the car is on or not. The tap is only for detection and not for pulling any current through. I would highly prefer to use a fuse in the engine bay instead of in the cab, as I would have to run another cable through the firewall and it was a PITA to get the first one through.
I've been looking at this diagram to find out what each fuse is for:
Other than that, I saw some people say to tap into the 7.5A USB charge port fuse (#29), but not only was I reading 0.05-0.06 while the car was off (is this normal?) it also did not drop from 12V after 5 minutes of the car being off. Is the USB charge port on some sort of timer and it will eventually turn off after 5 - 10 minutes?
The only other fuse I could tap (due to clearance/room) was #28, which is the "powertrain control module" (10A), but I'm not experienced to know enough if I should be tapping something that sounds important. This tap is only detecting current, it is not pulling anything over this tap, so I expect it should be fine?
So I'm wondering what my options are...
Refs
I've been looking at this diagram to find out what each fuse is for:
- https://www.startmycar.com/us/ford/ranger/info/fusebox/2022#anchorfusebox0
- https://fuse-box.info/ford/ford-ranger-2019-fuses-and-relays
Other than that, I saw some people say to tap into the 7.5A USB charge port fuse (#29), but not only was I reading 0.05-0.06 while the car was off (is this normal?) it also did not drop from 12V after 5 minutes of the car being off. Is the USB charge port on some sort of timer and it will eventually turn off after 5 - 10 minutes?
The only other fuse I could tap (due to clearance/room) was #28, which is the "powertrain control module" (10A), but I'm not experienced to know enough if I should be tapping something that sounds important. This tap is only detecting current, it is not pulling anything over this tap, so I expect it should be fine?
So I'm wondering what my options are...
- Keep tapping #28, the powertrain control module
- If #29, the USB charge port, does actually turn off eventually, I would prefer to use this one
- If it's easy to install the female connectors, I could do that and then tap into an "unused" fuse location
- Any other suggestions?
Refs
- This person says to use #35, but this is internal to the cab. Most posts I looked at say this but it's all internal to the cab
- This person says #29, but as I explained above I measured 12V when the car was off for 5 min
Sponsored