Just fyi for everyone here, do not put dielectric grease inside connectors. It is not conductive, and can actually create problems. I have fixed many vehicles by just cleaning out dielectric grease.
Unplug tank fuel pump at connector, so the only thing that will run the pump is YOU. Put one wire to ground and one wire to 12v battery power, from a battery stand alone. You can do it in the car as well, but you need a good 12v signal wire and connect the other lead to ground.How do I hit it with 12v ?

I’ll give it a try! Thanks very muchUnplug tank fuel pump at connector, so the only thing that will run the pump is YOU. Put one wire to ground and one wire to 12v battery power, from a battery stand alone. You can do it in the car as well, but you need a good 12v signal wire and connect the other lead to ground.
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Thx ,that helps! By “chassis battery”, is that referencing the one that’s in the car? Or, if I do the other option (stand alone) can I use the battery in my truck or do I have to remove it entirely?^ I modified the diagram a bit so it wouldn't be to confusing.
Chassis battery, yes, in car. If you have your battery in your trunk, you can easily use it. No need to disconnect from the system, just use jumper wires. Think of electrical as water, hydraulics, smoke, etc. It all functions the same way through valves, relays, connectors, etc. Easy peasy!Thx ,that helps! By “chassis battery”, is that referencing the one that’s in the car? Or, if I do the other option (stand alone) can I use the battery in my truck or do I have to remove it entirely?
Sorry I’m so ignorant about this stuff. For some reason “electrical” just doesn’t sink into my brain :-(
Battery is under the hood but jumper cables long enough to reach. I’ll give it a shot when I get home from work this afternoon. Fingers crossed I do it right!Chassis battery, yes, in car. If you have your battery in your trunk, you can easily use it. No need to disconnect from the system, just use jumper wires. Think of electrical as water, hydraulics, smoke, etc. It all functions the same way through valves, relays, connectors, etc. Easy peasy!![]()
LOL, my parents used to joke with me as a kid saying, “one of your greatest strong points is your willingness to admit your weak points!” No offense takenThat is the best idea. I don't want to call people out but when they start asking where to find a ground/chassis it is just time to admit that wiring is not your forte and that is fine a lot of people have issues with it. We need to know our limits and stay with in them.
Oh shit! I didn’t have dielectric grease at the time, so researched it and found out that petroleum jelly (aka Vaseline) is an affordable substitute. What’s the best way to clean that stuff out of there? Just a clean towel and a bunch of Q-tips?Just fyi for everyone here, do not put dielectric grease inside connectors. It is not conductive, and can actually create problems. I have fixed many vehicles by just cleaning out dielectric grease.
I wouldn't worry about it unless you put gobs of it there. I've used this my entire 40+ year career and not had an issue. I've yet to find an issue where it caused a problem and if it was/is such a problem, OEM's wouldn't use it. Like everything else, sometimes more is not better. jmoOh shit! I didn’t have dielectric grease at the time, so researched it and found out that petroleum jelly (aka Vaseline) is an affordable substitute. What’s the best way to clean that stuff out of there? Just a clean towel and a bunch of Q-tips?
Can it be that I actually DID reassemble everything correctly and it’s the damn petroleum jelly bogging down or killing the conductivity of the connectors?? Same reason it’s not even priming?
I did use a pretty good gob of it, admittedly. FWIW, there was a bit of something, which I presumed was dielectric grease, in each connector when I disassembled. I figured that’s all that remained after 30 years so that’s why I loaded it up. Good intentions; bad idea :-(I wouldn't worry about it unless you put gobs of it there. I've used this my entire 40+ year career and not had an issue. I've yet to find an issue where it caused a problem and if it was/is such a problem, OEM's wouldn't use it. Like everything else, sometimes more is not better. jmo
Use some alcohol or just brake-cleaner and a rag. I wouldn't worry about getting it pristine, just take the "gobs" off.I did use a pretty good gob of it, admittedly. FWIW, there was a bit of something, which I presumed was dielectric grease, in each connector when I disassembled. I figured that’s all that remained after 30 years so that’s why I loaded it up. Good intentions; bad idea :-(
So, after I disconnect the (-) battery cable, what should I use to clean them out?
Thanks everyone!!
wahuh?swap wires on the window switch so up is up and down is down.
When the glass shop installed the passenger side regulator, the drivers switch was bass-akwards! I didn’t want to take issue with it because they did it for free when I had the windshield replaced. Finally bugged me enough to ask them to make good on it, which they said they would, no problem. But I asked the shop it’s now at getting all the other work done if they could? No problem! Cool… saves me a trip to the glass shop.wahuh?