l008com
Senior Chief Petty Officer
- Joined
- Jun 14, 2007
- Messages
- 751
About 10 years ago I replaced the lights with LEDs on my 30ish year old trailer. And I replaced the plug a few times because I'm always having problems. I crimped everything, not soldering, so it's all going bad again. The original harness also had a bunch of built in plugs, so the lights were essential modular. But ideas in the 80s don't work so good here in 2019. So my crimps are going bad, the original connections are also going bad. It's all going bad.
So I'm thinking about just replacing the whole harness. It's only a 15' boat so what maybe a 20' harness. I have a few thoughts/questions on this.
First, it seems like grounds are constantly going bad. That's almost always the problem. So rather than grounding everything to the body of the trailer, I was thinking of buying a spool of thin white wire and doing a proper grounding from each light, all the way to the plugs and ultimately to the truck. It would be a little more soldering, but the end result should be MUCH more reliable than the standard ground-to-body configuration.
BUT is there any reason I shouldn't do this? Meaning, will there be some negative electrical effect of not grounding to the body of the trailer? Like the same reason you need zink on your hull, that kinda thing?
Second, where's a good place to get a quality harness? I know "quality harness" isn't really a thing, they're pretty much all dirt cheap items. Maybe then what I'm really looking for is some way to "reinforce" the plug end of the harness so the connector and wires leading in to it don't fail?
So I'm thinking about just replacing the whole harness. It's only a 15' boat so what maybe a 20' harness. I have a few thoughts/questions on this.
First, it seems like grounds are constantly going bad. That's almost always the problem. So rather than grounding everything to the body of the trailer, I was thinking of buying a spool of thin white wire and doing a proper grounding from each light, all the way to the plugs and ultimately to the truck. It would be a little more soldering, but the end result should be MUCH more reliable than the standard ground-to-body configuration.
BUT is there any reason I shouldn't do this? Meaning, will there be some negative electrical effect of not grounding to the body of the trailer? Like the same reason you need zink on your hull, that kinda thing?
Second, where's a good place to get a quality harness? I know "quality harness" isn't really a thing, they're pretty much all dirt cheap items. Maybe then what I'm really looking for is some way to "reinforce" the plug end of the harness so the connector and wires leading in to it don't fail?