Switching itself? Not switching when the trigger is reattached? Are you sure the relay itself isn't sick? Can Rich borrow one of yours... Re: wiring diagrams -- we all love to reinvent our automobiles (myself included). Sometimes it's safety. Sometimes it's survival (have you considered simply switching that relay's trigger from under the dash?) The down side is we end up with wiring diagrams of dubious usefulness. Goober, the friendly neighborhood Volvo mechanic, played with my harness in the engine compartment when he swapped PRV's, but I'm finding all sorts of electrical surprises in places I don't think Goober ever went. Of course I'm just making matters worse with hidden headlight switches (finally fried the dash switch BTW -- thank goodness for the hidden one), fuel pump activators, etc. But since I am the last owner the car will ever have, no need to worry about someone else cussing after me. My travelling companion had electrical difficulties on last weekend's trip to get our torsion bars adjusted. I boldly grabbed the wiring diagrams, opened his chamber of horrors (my pet name for that hostile territory behind the passenger seat), and said "whoa". Wasn't any better under the dash. Didn't pull the console, but who knows what lurked under there. His car has been "modified." We ended up duct taping a temporary line under the vehicle. I'd suggest starting with Rich's trigger wire and following it backwards. Think of it as a treasure hunt (oh boy, fun!). Bill Robertson #5939 >--- In dmcnews@xxxx, Martin Gutkowski <webmaster@xxxx> wrote: > Hi all > > Since posting this to dmc_electrics, Rich has tried to chase this one > down for the best part of a day and AFAIK has failed. I have also > managed to put my glovebox back together :-) > -- > Hiya > > You could stare at the wiring diagram all day and not figure this one > out. I'm hoping someone with more knowledge than me of where the wiring > loom traces will have an idea on this one.