Attn Electrical Guru's!

bumpedmyhead

Well-Known Member
I picked up this led light off ebay, and want to mount it in my truck cap. A recent camping trip shed light that I need some light. As you can see, its a 2 wire setup with an off switch. I have no idea what to tap into. Something in the taillights? Im hoping for constant power, not switched, and pray I remember to turn it off. Im an electrical weenie, so be prepared to answer questions. Pics would be great! Thanks in advance.20190115_163113.jpeg20190115_163117.jpeg20190115_163123.jpeg
 
I picked up this led light off ebay, and want to mount it in my truck cap. A recent camping trip shed light that I need some light. As you can see, its a 2 wire setup with an off switch. I have no idea what to tap into. Something in the taillights? Im hoping for constant power, not switched, and pray I remember to turn it off. Im an electrical weenie, so be prepared to answer questions. Pics would be great! Thanks in advance.View attachment 23458View attachment 23459View attachment 23460
No electrical gurus....


Headbumper....
What truck is this going in?
Any trd packages?
Tow packages?

Im no guru but the above info might help someone else.

The easiest answer i can give would be to run the wiring to the battery with an inline fuse.
 
I don't sparky much, but I agree with Jangley. I think your simplest and probably best way would be to run a dedicated, constant powered, sufficient-plus-a-little gauge wire with an inline fuse back there. Wouldn't be interfering with anything else if the wire ever happens to short out and pops the fuse.
 
Headbumper....
What truck is this going in?
Any trd packages?
Tow packages?

Im no guru but the above info might help someone else.

The easiest answer i can give would be to run the wiring to the battery with an inline fuse.
18 trd sport dblcab, with tow pkg. Also have the inverter in back
 
Headbumper....
What truck is this going in?
Any trd packages?
Tow packages?

Im no guru but the above info might help someone else.

The easiest answer i can give would be to run the wiring to the battery with an inline fuse.

This is what I would do. Easiest solution and less risk of compromise to any other system.
 
You would have to check. My GMC had a constant hot wire. Not positive, but I would assume for electric brakes. Haven't had a chance to check my Toyota.
Could be a big help, thats what i was hoping for and why i asked if op had tow or trd packages. Good to see this could be a possibility.
 
This may be more wiring than you want to run, but if you could route a small maybe 16 gauge wire from your cap to the engine bay you could get an “add a fuse” and the DRL fuse has constant power in it. All you have to do is pull the fuse and place the add a fuse in its place. The add a fuse has 2 slots. One for the fuse you took out and one for the line you’re running to. No cutting in your factory wiring and it’s fused. If your light already has a switch, there’s no need for anything else. Just route the wire neatly under the cab tucked and tied away and you could easily find a bolt closer to where your light is going to be that would serve as ground so you wouldn’t need to run a long ground wire. Hope that helps
 
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