The very first thing to do is a THOURGH visual inspection. Start with the wiring in the engine compartment as it is subjected to high temps and possible pinch points. Look for cut or caught wires, bare spots, brittle insulation, wires sticking out or bad repairs, even wires going to the wrong places. Disconnect the CPR and pull the Lambda relay. Try running the fuel pump. If it still blows inspect the wiring to the fuel pump, someone may have made a mess of it trying to bypass the inertia switch. Disconnect the fuel pump and see if the fuse holds. It is also a good idea to measure the draw on #7 as if it is really high it indicates a direct short probably somewhere in the wiring. If it is really high disconnect one thing at a time till it goes away. If it doesn't then you will have to follow the wire (N) brown until you find the source of the trouble. Don't get tempted to try to use a larger fuse, you are not fixing the problem and might set yourself up for an electrical fire. For short term troubleshooting find a 20A circuit breaker so you don't use up a lot of fuses but don't leave it in. Carefully inspect the wiring terminals in the fuseblock at #7 as that circuit has melted in some cars and bypass fuses (external to the fuseblock) have been known to be installed. David Teitelbaum vin 10757 --- In dmcnews@xxxx, Lance Haslewood <lanceh@xxxx> wrote: > I'm currently having a problem with the electrical system and would be grateful if someone might be able to offer some advice or perhaps a > solution.