Nick
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thank you for the info i have the same problem and I will try what is suggested, also I notice that under the clutch pedal there is a switch similar to the one on the brake pedal for the brake light can anyone tell me what this switch is for.nibbes123 wrote:Ok will do
Thanks
Usually to disable the starter unless you have the clutch pedal pressed all the way down. Many will be bypassed over time.sergio1977 wrote:thank you for the info i have the same problem and I will try what is suggested, also I notice that under the clutch pedal there is a switch similar to the one on the brake pedal for the brake light can anyone tell me what this switch is for.nibbes123 wrote:Ok will do
Thanks
thank you
Didn't have it in my '82.DieselSpider wrote:I was under the impression that DOT mandated them around 75 or was that when they started with the seat belt interlock.
It is a fast idle switch; FIATs didn't have a starter engagement switch. Thank god...we'd have a whole forum on melted switches and burnt ignition leads.DieselSpider wrote:I was under the impression that DOT mandated them around 75 or was that when they started with the seat belt interlock. Both generated a lot of talk on how to disable them. Can't go by mine as it is far from stock with the way the diesel was shoehorned in. Yes the wiring diagram on the 77/78 has a fast idle switch listed. I would say easily that 80% of the engine wiring is unused on mine with most of it just hanging loose in the engine compartment. I am still identifying open bare terminators carrying power tucked into various hiding places rather than safely being capped off.
Not used by the Diesel IP which simply has a fuel cutoff, cold start device hooked to a temp sensor and a tach connection. I am liking the economy and simplicity along with the long haul reliability more and more. Last stick I bought without the starter interlock switch was a 62 Falcon with the small straight 6 which they never should have produced. It was like they skipped installing every other main bearing and what they did put in was undersized.bradartigue wrote:It is a fast idle switch; FIATs didn't have a starter engagement switch. Thank god...we'd have a whole forum on melted switches and burnt ignition leads.DieselSpider wrote:I was under the impression that DOT mandated them around 75 or was that when they started with the seat belt interlock. Both generated a lot of talk on how to disable them. Can't go by mine as it is far from stock with the way the diesel was shoehorned in. Yes the wiring diagram on the 77/78 has a fast idle switch listed. I would say easily that 80% of the engine wiring is unused on mine with most of it just hanging loose in the engine compartment. I am still identifying open bare terminators carrying power tucked into various hiding places rather than safely being capped off.
On cars with the fast idle circuit when the clutch is disengaged and the transmission is in 3 or 4 the fast idle solenoid will open and the idle will increase until engine speed drops. It is to alleviate the rich condition that occurs when you snap the throttle shut and engage the clutch during decels.