Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

main fusible fuse blew

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • main fusible fuse blew

    I have a 91 Festiva GL with FI. I left my headlights on accidently and discovered it two plus hours later. Surprisingly the car fired right up! I turned it off open the door and the seat belt didn't retract. I discovered today that the fusible (replacement fusible cartridge fuse had blow). Any ideas on why it would blow?

    Thanks for any answers.
    kned33

    91 blue Festiva GL (totaled)
    88 white Festiva L (sold)
    91 blue Festiva L (sold)

  • #2
    What actual fuse blew?
    Where was it located?
    What position was the key in when the fuse blew...engine running?
    The head lights on and blown fuse may be unrelated.
    Joe Lutz

    The SKATE ..... 1992L 5spd
    The Greatest Purchase I Ever Made

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by jglutz View Post
      What actual fuse blew?
      Where was it located?
      What position was the key in when the fuse blew...engine running?
      The head lights on and blown fuse may be unrelated.
      The 30 amp (pink) fusible cartridge blew. It is located in the middle of the fusible link block. I only know that after turning off the engine that the automatic seatbelt didn't work. I really thought that kind of odd since the engine was just running. But I reasoned that the battery was more drained than I thought. I tried starting it the next morning and not even a click.

      I put the battery charger on. Opened it an hour later and the seatbelt still didn't work. That is when I actually discovered the blown fuse... Haven't had anymore problems since replacing fuse. Still I would like to know what could have cause the fuse to blow.
      kned33

      91 blue Festiva GL (totaled)
      88 white Festiva L (sold)
      91 blue Festiva L (sold)

      Comment


      • #4
        I have had this problem many times, has anyone else??

        When the battery gets too run down, but not enough to prevent starting, then the charging current draw exceeds the fuse rating and it pops. This stops charging the battery, but the car runs off the alternator. The only way to fix it is to charge the battery with a home charger and replace the fuse.

        In the Ford Escort, this same fuse is rated at 80A instead of 20 or 30. My theory is that Ford cheaped out on the cable running from the alternator so they protect it with a low fuse. But does a 30A charging current seem ridiculously high to anyone?

        This happened to me last weekend and now both my coil and ignition module do not work. I think the transient from blowing the fuse caused that. This seems like a very bad problem with the Festiva, but it hasn't got much attention here.

        Is this the proper diagnosis? Is there a fix?

        Nat
        BP powered 91 Festiva L
        -FMS springs, GR2 struts, Toyo T1R 195/45/14 on Swift GT alloys
        -Trunk mounted gel battery
        -Suzuki Swift GT seats, Grant GT steering wheel, auto-locks
        -Blaupunkt Melbourne deck with Bluetooth, sealed single 12" sub

        Comment


        • #5
          I popped a main fuse the other day because of a loose battery cable (on purpose). I've never seen a "regular" car do this but when I hit the key to start, the fuse popped.

          I have no idea why but I'd bet the cause of it is related.

          Comment


          • #6
            i think the upgrade from Ford calls for a 35 amp fuse



            I am the original

            Comment


            • #7
              I've seen some posts on here saying 30-40-30 in the fuse block. I am not sure about the 35, but I know I have heard about the 40 in the middle.
              The normal is not always normal... MOST is not ALL... And any job can be hard if you don't have the right tools!!!

              My Fleet:
              89 L 4spd (Daily Driver(if it isn't broke down)) "Spanky"

              Comment


              • #8
                TSB raised center fuse from 30 to 35.
                I personally run 40 in two different cars for 200K miles.
                I still have the fuse blow if I leave the lights on and kill the battery.
                Best to let it idle (restricting amps to battery) for a while and give the battery a partial charge.
                Or if possible trickle charge it over night.
                Either way a partially charged battery will not draw maximum amperage and should not blow the fuse.
                '93 Blue 5spd 230K(down for clutch and overall maintanence)
                '93 White B6 swap thanks to Skeeters Keeper
                '92 Aqua parts Car
                '93 Turquoise 5spd 137K
                '90 White LX Thanks to FB71

                "Your God of repentance will not save you.
                Your holy ghost will not save you.
                Your God plutonium will not save you.
                In fact...
                ...You will not be saved!"

                Prince of Darkness -1987

                Comment

                Working...
                X