• Mustang Forums
  • 1965 - 1973 Classic Mustangs -General/Talk-
  • Classic Mustang Specific Tech

Headlight switch/fuse panel

  • Thread starter Thread starter chrissarine
  • Start date Start date May 12, 2007

chrissarine

New Member
May 3, 2007
9
0
0
May 12, 2007
#1
  • May 12, 2007
  • #1
Does anyone know if there are any replacement headlight switches on the market that are a little more advanced than the old stock '64-'68 ones? The only ones I have found are just reproductions of the old type.

I'd think someone would eventually come up with something better than the spring resistor and the little contact tips. And the circuit breaker that has no reset?

I'm also wanting to upgrade my fuse panel to the newer 2 blade push-in type. I've found the rewire kits from Painless, but I haven't seen the fuse panels alone for sale. How much trouble is this swap? I've never had the fuse panel out to look at the back of it, but I don't imagine it can be too hard to do. I'm wondering if I'll have to re-terminate all the wires, or can you unplug them from the fuse panel?

Any info is much appreciated!

Chris Sarine
 

chrissarine

New Member
May 3, 2007
9
0
0
May 13, 2007
#2
  • May 13, 2007
  • #2
No replies for the rookie?
 
P

PJx5x

Member
Mar 30, 2005
197
0
16
Chicago
May 13, 2007
#3
  • May 13, 2007
  • #3
http://store.summitracing.com/egnsearch.asp?N=700+4294925143+4294839062+115+4294843320


However I recommend replacing the wiring too, as it is 40 years old
 

chrissarine

New Member
May 3, 2007
9
0
0
May 13, 2007
#4
  • May 13, 2007
  • #4
Thanks for the link! I guess I have more options to choose from than I thought.

By the way, I like your hood, too.
 
6

66HertzClone

New Member
Aug 24, 2004
428
0
0
Central New Jersey
May 13, 2007
#5
  • May 13, 2007
  • #5
chrissarine said:
Does anyone know if there are any replacement headlight switches on the market that are a little more advanced than the old stock '64-'68 ones? The only ones I have found are just reproductions of the old type.

I'd think someone would eventually come up with something better than the spring resistor and the little contact tips. And the circuit breaker that has no reset?


Chris Sarine
Click to expand...

The circuit breaker automatically resets, no button needed. If you really wanted something different for the dash lights why not bypass the resistor on the switch and install a pot or thumb-wheel type from a more modern car. Seems like a lot of work for something you hardly ever touch once you set it where you want it.
 
6

66forfun

Member
Feb 25, 2006
260
0
16
Pittsburgh
May 13, 2007
#6
  • May 13, 2007
  • #6
adding a relay for low beam and one for high beam keeps all that voltage off of the switch and sends it directly to the bulbs. there are kits or it can be done on the cheap with wirecutters. this is the mod that should be right up there with getting rid of that jelly jar master cylinder on early cars.
 

jikelly

20+ Year Stangneter
Jul 9, 2003
872
53
99
Lubbock Tx
May 13, 2007
#7
  • May 13, 2007
  • #7
66forfun said:
adding a relay for low beam and one for high beam keeps all that voltage off of the switch and sends it directly to the bulbs. there are kits or it can be done on the cheap with wirecutters. this is the mod that should be right up there with getting rid of that jelly jar master cylinder on early cars.
Click to expand...

My headlights started turning off on me randomly at night, and then it became they wouldn't work for longer than 15 min. I discovered that the current draw through the headlight switch was causing it to overheat and trip the internal circuit breaker. So I wired in relays so that all the switch did was turn on the relays. worked like a charm. It was hard to believe I did something right the first time out
 

chrissarine

New Member
May 3, 2007
9
0
0
May 14, 2007
#8
  • May 14, 2007
  • #8
jikelly, this sounds good. I'll have to go looking for a relay kit. Where did you end up mounting the relays?

The harness that goes to my headlight switch has a bunch of wires, how did you know which ones to use? Did you have to run a separate 12v to your relays?

I still don't like how hot the coil spring resistor gets when it has power on it.......I was hoping there was a direct plug in replacement out there somewhere with some kind of rheostat or something....

Thanks for the info!
 
You must log in or register to reply here.

Similar threads

J
Progress Thread Family member 1989 GT- Backstory and updates
  • JRC99
  • Apr 19, 2025
  • 1979 - 1995 (Fox, SN95.0, & 2.3L) -General/Talk-
Replies
15
Views
1K
1979 - 1995 (Fox, SN95.0, & 2.3L) -General/Talk- Oct 26, 2025
JRC99
J
Did an auto reset procedure earlier, few questions
  • from6to8
  • Jun 19, 2024
  • 1994 - 1995 Specific Tech
Replies
0
Views
350
1994 - 1995 Specific Tech Jun 19, 2024
from6to8
M
Progress Thread mnky99 2001 V6 evap core, ac compressor, heater core replacement
  • mnky99
  • Sep 5, 2025
  • 1996 - 2004 SN95 Mustang -General/Talk-
Replies
1
Views
428
1996 - 2004 SN95 Mustang -General/Talk- Sep 5, 2025
mnky99
M
I feel like I'm chasing my tail with this thing
  • LILCBRA
  • Oct 23, 2023
  • Other Auto Tech
  • 2
Replies
36
Views
5K
Other Auto Tech Apr 12, 2024
LILCBRA
Fuel Fuel Pump Rewire, New Fuel Lines, and Installation of New Fuel Pump Hanger with AN6 Connections
  • AeroCoupe
  • Mar 12, 2023
  • Fox 5.0 Mustang Tech
  • 2
Replies
33
Views
12K
Fox 5.0 Mustang Tech Apr 16, 2023
AeroCoupe
Share:
Bluesky Email Share Link
  • Mustang Forums
  • 1965 - 1973 Classic Mustangs -General/Talk-
  • Classic Mustang Specific Tech
Menu
Log in

Register

  • Forums
  • What's new
  • Media
  • Resources
  • Contact
  • Sponsor
X

Privacy & Transparency

We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:

  • Personalized ads and content
  • Content measurement and audience insights

Do you accept cookies and these technologies?

X

Privacy & Transparency

We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:

  • Personalized ads and content
  • Content measurement and audience insights

Do you accept cookies and these technologies?