wire diagram for 1990 ford f150 5.0
#1
wire diagram for 1990 ford f150 5.0
I destroyed my ignition swith and the rod is bad inside the steering wheel. So i put a push start and turn the key for power and i bought anew key and ignition swith and i need a wiring diagram for the ignition sitch or th colors of the wire for the ignition, acc, batt is yellow and starter is blue with orange
#2
Starter wire is actually blue/red. Old faded wiring.
Yellow is power in, you might have two of these.
Grey/yellow is hot in run and feeds the blower motor and the rear defogger(part of the fuse box).
Red/lightgreen is hot in run and feeds lot of things, like the coil, inst cluster, and parts of the fuse box.
black/lightgreen is hot in run and acc position. It feeds the wipers, and different parts of the fuse box (like the radio and other stuff that works in the acc position).
Brown/pink is hot in start only, and is jumped to the red/lightgreen.
Yellow is power in, you might have two of these.
Grey/yellow is hot in run and feeds the blower motor and the rear defogger(part of the fuse box).
Red/lightgreen is hot in run and feeds lot of things, like the coil, inst cluster, and parts of the fuse box.
black/lightgreen is hot in run and acc position. It feeds the wipers, and different parts of the fuse box (like the radio and other stuff that works in the acc position).
Brown/pink is hot in start only, and is jumped to the red/lightgreen.
#4
That's the million dollar question. The factory makes their switch have different sections for current carrying ability, and to also get rid of any back-feeding problems you might have.
In other words, when the switch is in run, all these separate sections of the switch tie everything to the yellow wire. When you turn the switch off, it disconnects everything from the yellow wire, and all the circuits they have on separate parts of the switch are not tied together. Even though they were tied together when the switch is in run, the are separated when the switch is off. I don't know if I explained that well enough.
I have discouraged people from retro fitting regular switches for their trucks, but some do it anyway, and surprisingly some do not have any problems tying all your wires that require power to the one post. You more than likely will have to put 1 wire on the ign post, and run it a short distance and take all your hot feed wires from the truck's harness, and tie them to the one ign wire with a big wire nut.
I am not sure you are going to be able to use the acc part of your switch. It's not like you can tie the radio or something like that to the acc part of the switch, because it would then work when the switch was in acc, but would not work when the switch was in ign or what you would call the run position. You say "why not put the radio on the acc part of the switch and the ign part of the switch?". Well you run into the same problem I was describing in the previous paragraph; You end up tying everything to one post, and it only takes powering up one little thing and it's going to power up the whole shooting match.
You could use separate toggle switches for some things, if you do not forget and leave them on and run the battery down.
In other words, when the switch is in run, all these separate sections of the switch tie everything to the yellow wire. When you turn the switch off, it disconnects everything from the yellow wire, and all the circuits they have on separate parts of the switch are not tied together. Even though they were tied together when the switch is in run, the are separated when the switch is off. I don't know if I explained that well enough.
I have discouraged people from retro fitting regular switches for their trucks, but some do it anyway, and surprisingly some do not have any problems tying all your wires that require power to the one post. You more than likely will have to put 1 wire on the ign post, and run it a short distance and take all your hot feed wires from the truck's harness, and tie them to the one ign wire with a big wire nut.
I am not sure you are going to be able to use the acc part of your switch. It's not like you can tie the radio or something like that to the acc part of the switch, because it would then work when the switch was in acc, but would not work when the switch was in ign or what you would call the run position. You say "why not put the radio on the acc part of the switch and the ign part of the switch?". Well you run into the same problem I was describing in the previous paragraph; You end up tying everything to one post, and it only takes powering up one little thing and it's going to power up the whole shooting match.
You could use separate toggle switches for some things, if you do not forget and leave them on and run the battery down.
#5
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#8
I used to have a 1967 Chevy van, with a big ole 350 in it. The ignition went, the part was expensive, my kids were young, and cash was tight. I bypassed the ignition and ran a $1.19 doorbell ran off the starter. I used two self tapping sheet metal screws and attached to the front of the doghouse down by the floor. Started every time. That van would fly! Just thought I`d share this, kinda funny now all these years later.
#9
different color scheme for my wires.
Hey all, was going to add push button start in my truck but the color scheme you guys are showing is different than mine. I have grn/org, org/lt blue, wh/red, wh/lt blue, lt blue, green, dk blue, yel/lt blue, blk/purple, and grn/wh. Anyone have this scheme and can tell me which wires to splice into for my switch?
#10
Hey all, was going to add push button start in my truck but the color scheme you guys are showing is different than mine. I have grn/org, org/lt blue, wh/red, wh/lt blue, lt blue, green, dk blue, yel/lt blue, blk/purple, and grn/wh. Anyone have this scheme and can tell me which wires to splice into for my switch?
#12
I went to local pick a part yard and the only 3 vehicles that matched mine had same color scheme on their wiring as well. the arm for my switch is bent and won't actuate starter, I can get power, just no crank. That's why I was going to put in a start switch n use key for power n shut off. Just don't know which wires to use for switch.
#13
I went to local pick a part yard and the only 3 vehicles that matched mine had same color scheme on their wiring as well. the arm for my switch is bent and won't actuate starter, I can get power, just no crank. That's why I was going to put in a start switch n use key for power n shut off. Just don't know which wires to use for switch.
Take the shroud off the column that is close to the instrument cluster(sounds like you may already have this off). I am also assuming you have seen the rod that moves back and forth to actuate the switch. If you can turn the keyswitch as far as it will go, and then take pliers and "help" the rod down for it to crank the truck, then most likely that piece is broken up inside the column.
Piece #14 in the picture below is the one that breaks.
Here's a link with more info.
https://www.ford-trucks.com/forums/8...k-in-park.html
Here is a picture of the piece before it breaks.
Here it is broken.
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