Hey y'all,
I have a 1998 Mustang GT that's essentially stock (I do have a Cold Air Intake and the radio is aftermarket from the prior owner).
My AC has been out for a while, so yesterday I started trouble shooting it. I went through and checked fuses, tried bypassing my sensors and I tried to jump the the compressor by tying in wiring directly to battery. When I did that, I got some arcs and sparks so I stopped. Anyways, I measured the plug into the compressor and saw I had no power so I think it's the relay.
I did find a fuse I believed to be related to the AC was blown in the passenger compartment (#9), replaced it, but it didn't work.
After getting it back together, I took off 1/2 an hour down the road to my fishing hole. At first the speedometer was acting like it wasn't working, but then it did after say about 5 miles down the road. After letting the car sit for about 2 hours while I fished, I got back in and when it started, my radio was set back to station 87.5, which is the station my car resets to after I've unhooked battery. From there, I traveled about 30 min back to the grocery store to pick up a couple things. Upon leaving the grocery store, my lights took about 15 seconds to kick on.
This morning, heading to work, I turned on the radio and the lights. Everything was fine for about 5 minutes, then it went out. Power locks, radio, power mirrors, headlights and speedometer no longer work.
To my understanding (I've read conflicting things), those items are either on the same circuit or two separate circuits (Radio, headlights and speedo on one and power locks, power mirrors on the other, I THINK).
Took a small break at work and checked my fuses in the passenger compartment and in the engine bay -- everything is fine. Not a one blown. I checked each one, just in case the diagram I'm working off of is incorrect. I then double checked to make sure they were in snug and they were. With the exception of an unrelated fuse that appeared a little loose, everything else was fine.
To my understanding, if I had shorted something when I tried to jump to the compressor, a fuse would've blew. If I have a melted wire or something to that affect, I figured that would short and blow too. If I had caused a power surge, I figured it would be melted.
Electrical isn't my strong suit, so I might be totally wrong in the above paragraph.
Any ideas on what the hell is going on?
I have a 1998 Mustang GT that's essentially stock (I do have a Cold Air Intake and the radio is aftermarket from the prior owner).
My AC has been out for a while, so yesterday I started trouble shooting it. I went through and checked fuses, tried bypassing my sensors and I tried to jump the the compressor by tying in wiring directly to battery. When I did that, I got some arcs and sparks so I stopped. Anyways, I measured the plug into the compressor and saw I had no power so I think it's the relay.
I did find a fuse I believed to be related to the AC was blown in the passenger compartment (#9), replaced it, but it didn't work.
After getting it back together, I took off 1/2 an hour down the road to my fishing hole. At first the speedometer was acting like it wasn't working, but then it did after say about 5 miles down the road. After letting the car sit for about 2 hours while I fished, I got back in and when it started, my radio was set back to station 87.5, which is the station my car resets to after I've unhooked battery. From there, I traveled about 30 min back to the grocery store to pick up a couple things. Upon leaving the grocery store, my lights took about 15 seconds to kick on.
This morning, heading to work, I turned on the radio and the lights. Everything was fine for about 5 minutes, then it went out. Power locks, radio, power mirrors, headlights and speedometer no longer work.
To my understanding (I've read conflicting things), those items are either on the same circuit or two separate circuits (Radio, headlights and speedo on one and power locks, power mirrors on the other, I THINK).
Took a small break at work and checked my fuses in the passenger compartment and in the engine bay -- everything is fine. Not a one blown. I checked each one, just in case the diagram I'm working off of is incorrect. I then double checked to make sure they were in snug and they were. With the exception of an unrelated fuse that appeared a little loose, everything else was fine.
To my understanding, if I had shorted something when I tried to jump to the compressor, a fuse would've blew. If I have a melted wire or something to that affect, I figured that would short and blow too. If I had caused a power surge, I figured it would be melted.
Electrical isn't my strong suit, so I might be totally wrong in the above paragraph.
Any ideas on what the hell is going on?