Locutus wrote:yeah i was wondering the same thing. the only thing i can think of that's connected to the heater circuit is the cabin fan, but i haven't checked the electrical diagrams. still a much wiser choice than those people connecting directly to the stock horn/brake light circuit, since the heater circuit is fused at 30A (from memory). worst case scenario is no fan and horn... at least your brake lights will work!
not that it's a good indication of current headroom on that circuit, but some brave people have run fog/driving lights straight off the blue connector without any problems.
let us know what you find.
You are right, it is 30A, and it also (I think) the only circuit in the car that is actually a circuit breaker instead of a fuse. So it is a safer place to have it.
I will still be running a separate feed for the horn though.
Incidentally, I was driving the car this evening with the lights on, and they dim noticeably when you use the horn with the lights on.... so that 18A over the horn is a high current draw for the alternator!
Even those who replace the horn fuse with a 20A fuse are probably running on the limit as it will only leave 2A to run the brake lights.... I must do the math and figure out what they draw! ( can anyone tell me the wattage?)
And 1red5, I was soooooo wanting someone to cut me off today as well!
cheers
Chris
SOLD: '95 NA8 White with custom tan leather. BD bar, King Springs, 15" NB alloys.
Now driving a Mazda6 luxury sports.