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Jeep Wrangler JK
JK General Discussion
Overheating
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<blockquote data-quote="MacGuyver" data-source="post: 456776" data-attributes="member: 18877"><p>Wiring is essentially topic all in itself, the specific wire that is loose will probably be hard to track a video for. </p><p></p><p>That being said, the method is to track to the location that is causing the problem. Either while running with the tap / tug on the wires to walk back to the location, or with a continuity tester. </p><p></p><p>Once you find the bad connection, you fix it. Either with solder or a new wire.. and probably solder. Or tighten the bolt, screw, nut. </p><p></p><p>What you are describing is not a fix, but a band-aid. Ensuring the wire doesn't move may last for a bit, but eventually vibrations will cause it to fail again.. potentially more catastrophically. </p><p></p><p>If this is a specific part, take a picture and post it here. Then we can help.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="MacGuyver, post: 456776, member: 18877"] Wiring is essentially topic all in itself, the specific wire that is loose will probably be hard to track a video for. That being said, the method is to track to the location that is causing the problem. Either while running with the tap / tug on the wires to walk back to the location, or with a continuity tester. Once you find the bad connection, you fix it. Either with solder or a new wire.. and probably solder. Or tighten the bolt, screw, nut. What you are describing is not a fix, but a band-aid. Ensuring the wire doesn't move may last for a bit, but eventually vibrations will cause it to fail again.. potentially more catastrophically. If this is a specific part, take a picture and post it here. Then we can help. [/QUOTE]
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Jeep Wrangler JK
JK General Discussion
Overheating
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