Date: Sun, 12 Dec 2010 18:28:56 -0600
Reply-To: Alan Felder <dieseldoofus@GMAIL.COM>
Sender: Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From: Alan Felder <dieseldoofus@GMAIL.COM>
Subject: Re: Wiring in a new Stereo Unit
In-Reply-To: <AANLkTim0rJkvwggJVSQpN897yk0c7Kq4tmVfrWuv2VF3@mail.gmail.com>
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Annie - Yours seems to be as it should be.
I would be more interested in the brand and model number of the stereo you
have. This seems to be an issue internal to the stereo units, and there is
not any published information that I know of that can tell us which
make/models will not draw any/much power when they are "off". Maybe this
can start to build some data for the Vanagon Wiki, or some such.
On Sun, Dec 12, 2010 at 6:17 PM, Annie <lsandrsn@gmail.com> wrote:
> I have no idea how my stereo is wired since it was already there when I
> bought the van but I don't need the key in or ignition on to use the stereo
> and even with the faceplate on, it hardly draws anything when the stereo
> power is turned off. And I have no auxiliary switch.
>
> Never had a problem with it draining the battery.
>
> Hmm.... now I'm wondering exactly how it's wired. Sounds like this is what
> you were going for? If it ever stops raining, I might go out and have a look
> at it to see if I can see what the previous owner did.
>
> *Annie Anderson* Blogger, Designer, Thinker & Mom
> web: annieandersonblog.com email: lsandrsn@gmail.com
> twitter: silverlunace <http://twitter.com/silverlunace> facebook:
> anniesanderson <http://facebook.com/anniesanderson>
> *Blazin' a trail where there is no path.*
>
> On Sun, Dec 12, 2010 at 4:01 PM, Alan Felder <dieseldoofus@gmail.com>wrote:
>
>> Mine is a Westy, and the brand of stereo is Dual - and yes, its the same,
>> whether or not the faceplate is "in" as long as the switch (ignition or
>> separate) is on, there is an inordinant current running through it.
>>
>> The only improvement in the switch setup is that you don't have to have
>> the
>> key on "accessory" and hear the buzzer, and use even more juice. There
>> doesn't appear to be a solution where you can use the remote and actually
>> turn the unit off. It will still draw power and run down your battery.
>> So,
>> you have to get up and switch it off.
>>
>>
>> On Sun, Dec 12, 2010 at 5:39 PM, Richard A Jones <Jones@colorado.edu>
>> wrote:
>>
>> > Sounds like you have it wired wrong. No car stereo should draw that
>> >> much with power off. It should have a "Batt" or "+12 V" connection,
>> >> which goes to the always on source. It should also have an "Ignition"
>> >> lead, which goes to a source which is switched (usually the key, but
>> >> maybe a separate switch). As long as the "Ignition" connection is off,
>> >> it should draw no more than about 10-20 mA.
>> >>
>> >
>> > I want my stereo wired so that I can play it without the key--it's
>> > a Westy. I put in a new Panasonic a few years ago and found that
>> > it draws almost its maximum rated if it is OFF and the face plate
>> > in left on. It is running who know what in the display. Pull
>> > off the faceplate and consumption drops to almost nothing.
>> >
>> > Sort of screwed my idea of using the remote from bed to turn it off.
>> > Overnight it will draw something like 12-15 amps, so I crawl out
>> > of bed to remove the faceplate.
>> >
>> > It was clearly designed to NOT be wired the way I did.
>> >
>> > Richard
>> >
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> Alan Felder
>> Austin TX
>> 82 Diesel Westy
>>
>
>
--
Alan Felder
Austin TX
82 Diesel Westy
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