Steve
GS Whisperer
I can tell you how I did it if you want.
Hey, even if you don't want, I'm gonna do it anyway.
At the fuse panel is a 4-pin plug. One wire comes from the ignition switch to feed the top three fuses, the other three wires are the ones going from the fuses to their respective circuits. I removed the headlight wire from that plug and re-routed it to a relay, using terminal 30 on the relay. From terminal 87a on the relay, I routed a wire back to the headlight feed where I disconnected it. (You could also just cut the wire before or after the plug, I chose to remove the terminal from the plug and insert another terminal.) Back at the relay, connect terminal 85 to the starter terminal on the solenoid and terminal 86 to ground. Here is how it now works: Terminal 87a is "normally closed", meaning that it will pass current from 30 to 87a. When the starter is activated, you now also activate the coil in the relay, which moves the power from terminal 87a to 87, which has nothing attached. Since 87a now has no power, the headlight goes OFF. When you release the starter button, the relay relaxes, power returns to 87a and the headlight comes back ON. Note that this is a fail-safe system. If the relay malfunctions and does not operate, you still have a headlight, it just won't go OFF when you push the starter button.
.
Hey, even if you don't want, I'm gonna do it anyway.
At the fuse panel is a 4-pin plug. One wire comes from the ignition switch to feed the top three fuses, the other three wires are the ones going from the fuses to their respective circuits. I removed the headlight wire from that plug and re-routed it to a relay, using terminal 30 on the relay. From terminal 87a on the relay, I routed a wire back to the headlight feed where I disconnected it. (You could also just cut the wire before or after the plug, I chose to remove the terminal from the plug and insert another terminal.) Back at the relay, connect terminal 85 to the starter terminal on the solenoid and terminal 86 to ground. Here is how it now works: Terminal 87a is "normally closed", meaning that it will pass current from 30 to 87a. When the starter is activated, you now also activate the coil in the relay, which moves the power from terminal 87a to 87, which has nothing attached. Since 87a now has no power, the headlight goes OFF. When you release the starter button, the relay relaxes, power returns to 87a and the headlight comes back ON. Note that this is a fail-safe system. If the relay malfunctions and does not operate, you still have a headlight, it just won't go OFF when you push the starter button.
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