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Best possible relay for coil relay mod?

I've only ever used no name brand from Ebay/Amazon... maybe I got lucky. It's not difficult to wire one relay to do all the circuits but you do need to put a new main fuse in the pin 30 line (20amp) & T the RR back into that line. The Orange wire then basically becomes the relay switch wire & pin 87 supplies the OW/OG/OR from memory. Easy enough to figure out with a diag.
 
wait am i really losing voltage to my headlight from having a coil relay mod?
Hopefully you are being facetious, but I suspect you are not.

You are not losing voltage to your headlight because of your coil relay. You are losing voltage to your headlight because of the same reason you were losing voltage to your coils. The voltage to the fusebox (which feeds the coils and the lights) is often hampered by dodgy connections in and around the ignition switch.

If you turn on your reading comprehension and re-read post #15, there is nothing there that suggests that the coil relay robs voltage from the headlight. It says "your LIGHTS are not getting full voltage, either", meaning that they were not getting full voltage all along. The coil relay mod restores power to the coils, but does nothing (positive OR negative) to the lights.

The point is: rather than apply a band-aid to each circuit, just fix the main problem.
 
Just to chime in: I use Solid-state relays at my job, they're quite reliable even with all the vibration. Sand doesn't have contact points, so it just keeps kicking no matter how hostile the environment.

However, they are not forgiving; even an amp over the nameplate capacity and that's that. You'll also need to attach the relay to a flat metal surface for cooling. But, you've accounted for failure with that jumper.
Here's an example of one: <fake link removed by free99> but I'm sure you can find others. Just be sure to specify that it's a DC SSR (solid state relay), the technology within is a bit different to that of AC SSRs.

I wonder how many amps our coils actually draw at peak? Hmm..
 
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Just to chime in: I use Solid-state relays at my job, they're quite reliable even with all the vibration. Sand doesn't have contact points, so it just keeps kicking no matter how hostile the environment.

However, they are not forgiving; even an amp over the nameplate capacity and that's that. You'll also need to attach the relay to a flat metal surface for cooling. But, you've accounted for failure with that jumper.
Here's an example of one: https://www.amazon.com/SSR-100DD-Solid-State-Relay-Module/dp/B07PFDJQLV/ but I'm sure you can find others. Just be sure to specify that it's a DC SSR (solid state relay), the technology within is a bit different to that of AC SSRs.

I wonder how many amps our coils actually draw at peak? Hmm..

Poor example, that one. Nearly every reviewer called it a fake.
 
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