Engine block should do, one rule on the HMMWV is not to use the body for a ground
Agreed on that, I've run a grounding kit on mine and could pick up at that point on the body. Just cleaner looking than a ton of redundant wires.
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Engine block should do, one rule on the HMMWV is not to use the body for a ground
Well I will hold that against you, the "grounding kit" is completely unnecessary and IMHO is borderline to a scam, everything in a HMMWV has a return wire and as long as the few original ground points are checks there will be no issues, in fact some of those points are disturbed while installing the kit leaving some to believe the kit actually helped when in fact they stumbled across the problem while installing it, in fact creating "ground loops" can be dangerous.Agreed on that, I've run a grounding kit on mine and could pick up at that point on the body. Just cleaner looking than a ton of redundant wires.
Well I will hold that against you, the "grounding kit" is completely unnecessary and IMHO is borderline to a scam, everything in a HMMWV has a return wire and as long as the few original ground points are checks there will be no issues, in fact some of those points are disturbed while installing the kit leaving some to believe the kit actually helped when in fact they stumbled across the problem while installing it, in fact creating "ground loops" can be dangerous.
That's a hard lesson learned, glad it wasn't worse. I had a good friend that had a shop fire a short time ago, not a pretty thing.In fact I have seen this many times and even I am not immune.
A couple months ago I was mig welding a chassis on my lift.
I had failed to make sure the ground lead from the welder was well connected.
The welding current found a "ground loop" in the form of the #12 ground wire from the lift back to the breaker box, then from the breaker box to the welder through its ground wire.
This was all inside a 2" steel conduit carrying all 7 of the circuits from the breaker box to my shop and I stood there rather dumbfounded as there was one explosion after another inside the conduit as one circuit shorted after another until all 7 breakers were tripped and all the wire in that conduit was melted.
This lead to 6 hours of pulling new cable, thank God it was all inside steel conduit or it could have started a fire.
These light kits were not designed for trucks with 60amp Gens….you would Be best served upgrading to a 200amp.
Also, I would be very careful with that Pulsetek box, they are dumped for a reason many many moons ago.
I’ve seen the solar panal over charge the batteries and cause battery to explode…seems the unit can and will overcharge to 36volts.
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