Blown Fusible link

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  • Driftwood
    350 Buick
    • Jun 12, 2000
    • 959

    Blown Fusible link

    The large 12 gauge wire coming from the starter relay laid up against the exhaust manifold. Half the wire melted and the fusible link vaporized.

    Side-of-the-road wiring repair took approx 2 hours.

    Last edited by Driftwood; 12-22-2017, 07:30 PM.
    1979 Wagoneer
  • Driftwood
    350 Buick
    • Jun 12, 2000
    • 959

    #2
    Last edited by babywag; 12-23-2017, 09:23 AM.
    1979 Wagoneer

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    • Driftwood
      350 Buick
      • Jun 12, 2000
      • 959

      #3
      Here's the fusible link. All that's left is the ring terminal and insulation.

      Last edited by babywag; 12-23-2017, 09:23 AM.
      1979 Wagoneer

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      • Driftwood
        350 Buick
        • Jun 12, 2000
        • 959

        #4
        Think I found a source for fusible links. Amazon carries all types of them.

        1979 Wagoneer

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        • Heavy_Metal_Thunder_81
          Cherokee Outlaw
          • Jan 10, 2006
          • 7292

          #5
          BTDT...
          I've never had a problem finding rolls of fusible link at NAPA.
          -Jonny B.
          1979 Cherokee Golden Eagle - UNDER CONSTRUCTION
          7" Alcan springs, BJ's HD shackles - 35x12.5x15 BFG Mud Terrains
          AMC 401 - Pro-Flo 4 EFI
          NV4500/NWF BB/NP205 - Triple Stick'd
          F D44 - 4.10, Eaton E-Locker
          R M23 - 4.10, Detroit Locker

          1979 Cherokee Chief - Parts
          1979 Cherokee Chief - Parts
          1979 Wagoneer - Sold
          1981 Cherokee Chief - Cubed

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          • babywag
            out of order
            • Jun 08, 2005
            • 10286

            #6
            x2
            Any parts store has fusible links.
            Tony
            88 GW, 67 J3000, 07 Magnum SRT8

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            • 61Hawk
              258 I6
              • Jul 18, 2009
              • 377

              #7
              Is there any reason to not go with an inline fuse over the fuseable link? It's easier to replace a fuse than a burned out wire. That's what I've done when I had a fuseable link go.

              Comment

              • tgreese
                • May 29, 2003
                • 11682

                #8
                Originally posted by 61Hawk
                Is there any reason to not go with an inline fuse over the fuseable link? It's easier to replace a fuse than a burned out wire. That's what I've done when I had a fuseable link go.
                You could use a fuse or a circuit breaker for that matter. I'd think that ideally the fuse used should have a "slow blow" character and not go open in case of a momentary accidental short circuit.

                Fusible links are crimped and soldered into the harness, avoiding the failure point introduced by the mechanical connection of a fuse or breaker. Not perfect, but more reliable than a spring clip or nut. Fuses can fail unexpectedly and are subject to corrosion.

                Really, the fusible link is installed where it's only useful in case of a catastrophic short circuit, like you might have in a wreck. It should not need to be easily serviced. If you are blowing them regularly, there is something radically wrong with your wiring or how you use it.
                Tim Reese
                Maine beekeeper's truck: '77 J10 LWB, 258/T15/D20/3.54 bone stock, low options (delete radio), PS, hubcaps.
                Browless and proud: '82 J20 360/T18/NP208/3.73, Destination ATs, 7600 GVWR
                Copper Polly: '75 CJ-6, 304/T15, PS, BFG KM2s, soft top
                GTI without the badges: '95 VW Golf Sport 2000cc 2D
                ECO Green: '15 FCA Jeep Cherokee KL Trailhawk

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