I started the EFI project in December. Here it is April and I'm just about ready to crank her up for the first time.
I changed the air cleaner and painted the intake winkle black. I think it looks awesome. The coil was moved to the firewall to get it away from the electronics in the EFI. I will be switching to the Holley CD ignition unit when I upgrade the alternator to a 220 amp one wire unit. This is mainly because I plan to mount the controller box where the regulator is now, and the new coil where the old coil is. I won't do these upgrade until the EFI upgrade is paid off.
This is a American Autowire 510599 'Serve Duty' relay and fuse box for the EFI, Ignition, Fuel pump, headlights, and fans. I mounted it in the fender well because I had no where else to cleanly mount it. It's mounted with 2-1/2" 5/16 stainless steel bolts with 1-1/4" spacers. I'm going to see just how 'serve duty' this thing really is. Any color wire with be covered with the same black mesh as the rest of the harness. Can't have any color showing!
Stock alternator wire verse 4 awg upgrade. I should have no problem pumping 220 amps. I reused the old wire for the fuel pump ground, lol.
New driver side ground mount. It's a nickle plated copper grounding bolt. There's one just like this on the same spot on the passenger side to ground the alternator. If you're running 220 amp, you need to ground the alternator directly to the frame as grounding through the engine won't cut it.
What I don't have shown is all the rewiring to the factory harness. The blue and brown off the key now goes through a timed relay that powers a pink wire to turn on the fuse box. The voltage regulator is it own sub harness getting power off the coil which has it own 12v power coming off the fuse box. I converted the headlight to ground trigger system.
I got tired of unplugging the dash panel when I went to remove it so i cut the harness and wired in a 10 pin plug. The two pin plug is for the dash lights which I converted to LED. I still need to work on that as the voltage is too high to dim the LEDs.