
Originally Posted by
lostforawhile
snooze why don't you run the pink wire back to the clutch switch like on the factory cruise with manual transmission? if i remember correctly and i'll check with a meter, the clutch switch is grounded until you push it. you can check it really easy with a meter, see if there is ground between the pink wire coming out of the clutch switch, and ground on the car, with the clutch not pushed. then the ground should be cut off with the pedal pushed. i believe it's a pink wire at the clutch switch. if you didn't hook up either wire, the pink will go to the pink wire at the center console and the other wire to a ground source like the body. you also tie into this pink wire at the console for your start interlock relay. it's easy, the two wires for the interlock on the old shifter will go to the normally closed side of a bosch relay, the pink wire will go to the coil ground, the other coil wire will go to power at the key switch at start. I believe one of those heavy wires that used to go to the shifter may be the hot wire coming from the key at start, check with a meter and see if it goes hot when you turn the car over, if it does, you saved yourself a lot of wiring hassles. how this works, is normally the shifter interlock circuit is closed by the relay, when you turn over the car,if the clutch isn't pushed, the clutch switch provides ground to the relay coil, and the start circuit provides the hot side, so the relay opens,preventing the car from starting. if the clutch is pushed, there is no ground for the coil, the relay stays closed, and the car starts. Snooze you may have solved a mystery for me too. do the auto transmission cars have the short jumper plug between the fuse box, and the ignition switch plug? i'll bet that plug is only there on manual cars to eliminate the entire ignition interlock switch circuit. if it is, all you need to do is unplug that jumper from a manual car, plug it in, and bypass the entire ignition interlock system
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