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Simple Electrical Ideas for Musclecars
By Jeff Smith
Photography by Jeff Smith
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The most important tool in your electrical drawer should be some kind of digital multimeter. This is an Actron multimeter that can test for DC and AC volts, ohms, and continuity, as well as measure engine rpm and dwell. This is the Actron Auto Scanner model CP7677 available through Summit for $53. Actron also offers less expensive multimeters for the budget conscious.

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Late-model alternators like these smaller, more compact units are the hot ticket to creating sufficient amperage to run all those hungry electrical accessories. Late-model alternators are designed to create very close to maximum output at very low engine speeds.

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Fusible links were used on '60s GM cars to protect the electrical system from a direct short or overload. The links are designed to melt if excessive amperage is pulled through the wire. These fusible links are often eliminated, which creates an opportunity for a wiring meltdown and perhaps a fire. The links are located between the positive battery terminal and the main feed-terminal junction.

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M&H Wiring Fabricators makes a slick late-model conversion kit that converts '63-'72 GM external-regulator alternators to an internal-regulator alternator. This slick conversion does not require cutting or splicing any wires and uses adapter plugs to do the job. The biggest task is mounting the alternator.

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All GM cars from the '60s and early '70s use this separate 12-volt lead from the positive battery terminal to feed electrical power to the entire car separate from the starting circuit. This 14-gauge wire is way too small to adequately feed the electrical demands of the rest of the car. The small wire means high resistance. We changed to a large 8-gauge wire along with a fusible link, and all the electrical components' performance improved immediately.

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Painless also offers several versions of the add-on circuit board that will allow you to add several fused electrical circuits to your older musclecar. The kits are pre-wired into the fuse box, so all you have to do is feed power to the box and connect the circuits.
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Don't overlook ground circuits. This Camaro uses a way-too-small ground cable that actually got hot during cranking voltage-drop tests.
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We made new positive and negative cables for our test Camaro from cables from M.A.D. Enterprises. This reduced the voltage drop by over 1 volt, and now the engine cranks over like we're hitting it with an 18-volt battery.

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