DissFigured said:
I may try and do it myself. I am a reasonably smart guy. I even have a bachelor's in software engineering.
I have just found that when it comes to this car, i get really dumb really quickly and I fear I am going to rip all my wires out and not beable to get the new one installed for one reason or another and I am going to end up w/ a half wired car that wont start stuck in my driveway.
Hey I'm a reasonably smart guy with a bachelor's in SE as well so I know the situation you're in. It makes you feel stupid to be overwhelmed by something as simple as electricity SEEMS to be. The biggest problem is that it is invisible so you can't see a problem if you run across one. Continuity testers help make it visible.
I love planning as much risk out of things as I can, and having done SE, learned all about designing before implementation, so perhaps for guys like us it might be better for you to plan out the system you want to do. For instance you might want to start with a main power module - if your battery is in the trunk, bring a heavy gauge power cable to the centre of where you need it, and ground the battery well, and the engine. Perhaps hook the charging system to the battery before that.
The electrical system I want to build is a relayed system. A relatively small wire goes to the ignition key so that when it gets to the ON position, it turns on a relay. This relay can in turn power everything in the dash that requires ON ignition power and the relays elsewhere that need it, like perhaps an electric fuel pump.
Make sure you just work on one system at a time, basically each one is going to be:
wire - switch - wire - device - wire
I agree with what Dan said about the highschool dropout, and I look at electrical and engine stuff that gets talked about here and elsewhere and sometimes it overwhelms me, but I think, well, if these guys can do it, there's no reason I can't. I don't mean any offense, nor do I mean to compare said people to highschool dropouts, just that I'm sure as heck I'm just as good. Maybe I need some more knowledge, but that's not that hard to obtain.
I remember looking at gp001's wiring (I think it was his) with all the relays on a board and that's the kind of thing I want to do. Mine will hopefully seem more neat and understandable to me.

I didn't build gp's so I'm sure it's as neat and understandable to him as I hope mine will be.
Also if you do end up with a half-finished electrical system, make sure what you've done is labelled or documented clearly, so if you do need to get it finished professionally it should be a fair bit cheaper than redoing the whole lot.