sharpsicle
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Apr 29, 2021
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- Tampa, FL / Milwaukee, WI
- Vehicle(s)
- 2020 Gladiator Overland, 2002 VTX1800
Alright, I answered my own questions. I clearly needed to do some testing on my end earlier on.
First off, no there is no potential feedback loop. The lights are adequately separated. It was kind of silly of me to suggest that in hindsight.
Second, the courtesy light brightness is voltage controlled. It's on, but dim, before you open the door, and on brighter after you open it. My measurements show 6v, with a controlled increase to 12v. After you close the door, the voltage gradually drops off in line with the gradual dimming of the lights. So, what you're measuring and experiencing is apparently normal.
Now, why can others wire their lights up direct and you can't? Likely has to do with the bluetooth controller box not liking the lower voltage input. Not all lights are designed the same, and chances are if you hooked the lights direct to the Courtesy Light circuit they'd work the same way the interior lights do. But with the controller in the middle, it needs consistent power. I wasn't aware until today that your lights had a controller, that really changes things.
Sorry for dragging all this through everything. But testing and verification was key. All this being said, you're probably going to want something that can react and drive a 12v source from as low as 4v based on my testing. A lower limit of 6v isn't going to be reliable enough. It also needs to have an upper limit of 14v+ for when the truck is running.
The other alternative is to try and find another circuit that doesn't mess with the voltage. Not sure what candidates there would be for that, but I'm sure there's a way to do it.
Either way, that wire is one you can use, and your measurements are normal. Your trouble is indeed just the voltage variations.
First off, no there is no potential feedback loop. The lights are adequately separated. It was kind of silly of me to suggest that in hindsight.
Second, the courtesy light brightness is voltage controlled. It's on, but dim, before you open the door, and on brighter after you open it. My measurements show 6v, with a controlled increase to 12v. After you close the door, the voltage gradually drops off in line with the gradual dimming of the lights. So, what you're measuring and experiencing is apparently normal.
Now, why can others wire their lights up direct and you can't? Likely has to do with the bluetooth controller box not liking the lower voltage input. Not all lights are designed the same, and chances are if you hooked the lights direct to the Courtesy Light circuit they'd work the same way the interior lights do. But with the controller in the middle, it needs consistent power. I wasn't aware until today that your lights had a controller, that really changes things.
Sorry for dragging all this through everything. But testing and verification was key. All this being said, you're probably going to want something that can react and drive a 12v source from as low as 4v based on my testing. A lower limit of 6v isn't going to be reliable enough. It also needs to have an upper limit of 14v+ for when the truck is running.
The other alternative is to try and find another circuit that doesn't mess with the voltage. Not sure what candidates there would be for that, but I'm sure there's a way to do it.
Either way, that wire is one you can use, and your measurements are normal. Your trouble is indeed just the voltage variations.
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