Quote, originally posted by SlappyMcHappy »Is that possible? Tis certainly possible - and that's basically how I have mine wired. Ragingfish has a most excellent how-to here - it covers installing an auto-dimming mirror, but I think you'll find it useful:
http://forums.genvibe.com/zerothread?id=7735 It covers all the dirty stuff for setting up the Add-A-Circuit in the fuse block under the dash on the driver's side. You could refer to that for figuring out the wiring. Have a look at that thread, pretty good stuff. A word of advice from me - I initially purchased the wrong Add-A-Circuit for my car, thinking it took the larger blade-style fuses. Instead, get the one with the miniature fuses (whatever their technical name is) instead.Basically in my car, I have an Add-A-Circuit connected to the CIG fuse, which is switched on only when the ignition is in ACC or ON. From there, the power splits off - part goes to my auto-dimming mirror, and another wire goes up to the area to the left of the wheel where I have my switch mounted for my under-dash LED's. From the output of the switch, I basically ran one wire down, then combined both positive wires going to the LED'S. I previously had 4 sets of 6-LED pods mounted under the dash, but went back to just one per side because wiring under there was getting a bit too excessive. I did route the ground wires for all of 'em back to the single point behind the kick panel on the driver's side instead of finding individual ground points. That probably wasn't the best way to do it, I should have looked for a ground on the passenger's side, but anyway... Not sure if the way I have anything set up is the best way at going about this, but it works. I have a rather low amperage fuse (3A) in the Add-A-Circuit, and everything connected probably draws only a fraction of that, so I haven't had any issues with overloading the circuit, blowing fuses, etc... Haven't burned anything up yet, so that's a bonus! I have some sort of degree in electronics, too bad I don't remember much of it. It would come in handy sometimes!I'd say you're on the right track as far as grounding goes... With the variety of locations you'll be adding LED's, wouldn't make sense to have one central point for ground.Most important part, be careful! Avoid working around the air bags, and don't get yourself or the car hurt! Take your time to do it right the first time, if you need help let us know... Some of this stuff I have found is rather frustrating if you do a sloppy install from the get-go. Good luck to you, and hopefully some of the gurus here can get you going in the right direction. We have plenty of good talent around here!