Turns out the short was caused by the wire running to the AVCR boost solenoid being pinched under the radiator support bracket directly onto a small chip on top of the radiatorTo be honset Smo, that does not look like a factory loom to me.
In factory condition, there is no small loom like that running from the cabin, along the throttle cable and then up along the radiator support bracket.
Where does it go, and what does it do.
peter
The voltage is irrelevant, it's the current that causes the temperature rise and eventually a melt down. All cables have a max current carrying capacity at a certain ambient temperature. The wire you use smo needs to be the same gauge or prefably bigger than what was used before. You could do it properly by using the correct de-rating calculations for your selected cable.....but i won't bore you all with that :lol:.Anyway on 12 volts all cables will burn in 20 seconds....so there's not much to do.
Cheers for that bud - in the end I went with a dissected loom from a Celica GT4, like you said, bigger gauge.The voltage is irrelevant, it's the current that causes the temperature rise and eventually a melt down. All cables have a max current carrying capacity at a certain ambient temperature. The wire you use smo needs to be the same gauge or prefably bigger than what was used before. You could do it properly by using the correct de-rating calculations for your selected cable.....but i won't bore you all with that :lol:.
Could even whack an in-line fuse on there incase it happens again. Think of your house wiring.... every single bit of wiring is fused.
By the looks of it, the 12v supply is tapped off before it gets to the ECU (Orange wire) so thats probably why the ECU is ok still. The solanoid uses piss all current anyway, so the wiring to it is fairly thin; hence the short causing it to burn.
Glad you sorted it though mate 8)
Yes i'm talking amps 8)@Jambo
1.
I think you are talking about amperage.......
2.
The longer the wire you mount / replace the higher the resitance is.....so it's simple as that: put a thicker wire and you problem is solved.