[Farmall] Farmall B wiring
szabelsk at gdls.com
szabelsk at gdls.com
Mon May 17 05:18:07 PDT 2010
Craig,
When rewiring you need to keep in mind the current that the wire will have
to carry when the tractor is running. This varies by wire size based on
the temperature rating of the wire itself (actually the rating of the wire
insulation). There is no need to wire everything to a larger size wire if
it doesn't carry a lot of current, or carries a current only for a short
time. When I redid my Cub a few years back, I used 12 AWG for everything
dealing with the starter /generator circuit, and 16 AWG for everything
else (lights, etc). This simplified what I had to be worried about.
Usually length would also factor into the equation, but on tractors, those
lengths aren't usually long enough to consider. In addition, there are
factors related to bundling (number of wires grouped together) and whether
or not you're in free air, conduit, or in a sleeve of some type. It can
all get really complicated if you let it.
The following table shows the allowable currents for various wire sizes
and insulation ratings. I also included the approximate wire diameters
(for the wire without any insulation).
Wire Continuous Duty Current (Wires In Groups, Bundles,
Or Harnesses)
Gauge 105oC 150oC 200oC Wire Diameter
- Inch
Insulation Insulation Insulation
(Copper Conductor Only)
22 AWG 3A 5A 6A 0.084
20 AWG 4A 7A 9A 0.094
16 AWG 7A 11A 14A 0.120
12 AWG 13A 19A 25A 0.157
10 AWG 17A 26A 32A 0.181
8 AWG 38A 57A 71A 0.248
6 AWG 50A 76A 97A 0.293
4 AWG 68A 103A 133A 0.355
2 AWG 95A 141A 179A 0.420
Form the above table, you can see that you can use a smaller gauge wire in
a given instance, if the wire insulation has a higher rating so that it
can handle the additional heat caused by the current flowing through it (a
12 AWG with 200C insulation can carry more than a 10 AWG with 105C
insulation). Since engines have a tendency to generate heat, I would
suggest using a high temperature wire.
With respect to bundling the wires, any good shrink sleeve should do,
provided it also has a temperature rating in line with the environment
it's going to used in. If you pick a sleeving material that isn't right
for the temperature of the environment, it will either melt or split. Most
shrink sleeving has a two to one shrink ratio, so calculate the bundle
diameter and pick a sleeving that is roughly twice the calculated
diameter. Overlap the sleeving by roughly an inch and apply a layer of
silicone at that point before you shrink it down to size. This applies to
where you need to make branches as well. That will help keep water out.
Also use a silicone at the ends of the sleeving for the same purpose.
A simple way to build your new harness is to remove the old one and lay it
out flat (mark all the ends with tape as well as the corresponding
terminals when you disconnect them). Sketch the harness on a piece of
paper and record the lengths of each branch. Add in whatever you think
needs to be added, based on what you saw of the original harness
installation. After you cut your wires to length, loosely assemble them
into the harness and tie them together with string, roughly every 12 to 18
inches, and about 2 inches from where a branch needs to break out of the
main harness (remember that you will want to be able to overlap the branch
sleeving, so the tie point needs to be done before the branch breaks out).
This will keep the wires all nicely lined up and will help avoid things
getting tangled up. Once you have it tied together, you can lay it in
place on the tractor and make whatever adjustments you like before you
sleeve it. This is were making the individual wires longer than what is
necessary a good idea. After you lay the harness into position, you can
trim the wires to their required lengths. Keep in mind to leave enough
length for crimping terminals and the position the wire needs to be in to
make the connection. If you can, sleeve the harness while it's on the
tractor. That way you won't have to worry about things moving on you and a
branch winding up too short.
Hope this helps.
Carl Szabelski
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