Starting with 700103001r where is the original print located?
I have 3 workshop manuals and couldn’t find a black and white version in any manual.
Probably torn out and used to debug by the previous owner. I remember the original manual only had 2: S1 and S2. Didn't even address the federal versions.
Good thing the colorized version is on another site that we reference .
Yeah, took us over a year to figure out all the variations back in the 00s. Even then, there were things that didn't make sense. We did the best we could with what we had available.
I have been working with the DB10 relay and would like to see the original print that ours was copied from.
My search has found many incorrect versions of what it controls on another site . See picture.
These need to be purged from the internet. It’s upside down and the labeled control the wrong side .
Actually, in practice, as long as all the colors are on the same side, it doesn't matter. Match up your green/white and green/red leads on the same side in the same general order (terminal 3 &7 are rear lamps, 2 and 6 are front, those numbers should be stamped on the case, if they aren't, then you have a repop, which are out there) your signal from the brake switch on 5, and flasher on 1 and it will work if the colors of the leads from the indicator stalk match, too, on terminals 4 and 8. The genius of the British standard wiring code comes through.
The relay as it’s mounted in the car should be top1-4 bottom 5-8 that way if your problem is front right you would go to the top side term 1 ., rear on 3 ; left side problem in the back , term 7 . Maybe this is a better way to think about it.
I do want to thank Bruce Gayhart for his colorized schematic 👍👍
Dakazman
Or the one the diagrams were based on were removed from the car at one point and installed upside down. Again, it's the assignment of the wires to the proper signal terminals that are important, not the orientation of the box on the wall of the plenum. Having a wire signal tracer helps.
Yeah, Bruce did a good job with what Jerry Johnson, Whit Davis (RIP), Pete Blackford, Jay Mitchell, myself, Steve Veris, and a host of others putting those things together back in the day had to work with.