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6 answers

you have a circuit going to ground, and it will blow the fuse every time. recheck your wire harness andmake sure no naked wire or connection is being grounded other than a shielded ground for the radio,

2007-02-07 03:37:07 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Sounds like you installed the radio power feed on the same circuit as the tail lights and the resultant current draw is higher than allowed by the fuse.

Rewire the power feed to a circuit able to handle the higher current the radio draws.

2007-02-07 03:33:16 · answer #2 · answered by lunatic 7 · 0 0

You might have pinched the wire that runs to the tail lights, or created a short somewhere. You might also have wired the radio to the same circuit as the tail lights. If you're drawing power from that circuit, and you're driving a big honkin' set of speakers, you're overloading that circuit. Find a different hot wire to power the radio.

2007-02-07 03:34:00 · answer #3 · answered by Ralfcoder 7 · 0 0

the purely bring about that could be that there is too a lot potential being drawn (that is quite unlikely) or there's a warm and floor blending someplace. that's likely in the back of your radio, like others have reported. Take your radio out of the sprint and verify to make certain the wires are not revealing any bare wire. if so, use suitable ends to seal them off or electric powered tape.

2016-11-25 23:39:05 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

if you wired something incorrectly, you most certainly could be blowing fuses for the tail lights. Did you put the radio on its own fuse cricuit? if you didnt, you should.

2007-02-07 03:31:10 · answer #5 · answered by quickmirada 3 · 0 0

They may share the same circuit and the drain may be overloading the fuse when you put your brakes on while playing the radio.

2007-02-07 03:32:21 · answer #6 · answered by Shredded Cottage Cheese 6 · 0 0

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