The meaning of ignition switch labels

Gotta love that wiring . . .
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18Fiatsandcounting
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Joined: Fri Mar 15, 2019 11:23 pm
Your car is a: 1969 and 1971 124 spiders
Location: San Francisco Bay Area

The meaning of ignition switch labels

Post by 18Fiatsandcounting »

Maybe this has been mentioned before, but it turns out that the numbers on various electrical devices do actually have a standardized meaning. It's governed by DIN standard 72552, and the following link summarizes them:
http://www.sealtd.net/quattro/ishamrese ... inals.html
(If the link is broken, just search the web for "DIN 72552")

For example, 15 on the ignition switch is the switched + battery output from the ignition switch, and 50 is the control for the starter motor (the starter solenoid). So now you know what the terminal numbers on the back of your ignition switch mean, as well as the voltage regulator, alternator, etc, etc. Hooray!

Turns out there is method in the madness. I have not yet found what "INT" means, but I'm still looking.

-Bryan
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RRoller123
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Re: The meaning of ignition switch labels

Post by RRoller123 »

Internal connection? Shared with another terminal? INT
'80 FI Spider 2000
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SteinOnkel
Posts: 1000
Joined: Tue Feb 19, 2019 9:31 pm
Your car is a: 1978 124 Spider 1800

Re: The meaning of ignition switch labels

Post by SteinOnkel »

18Fiatsandcounting wrote:Maybe this has been mentioned before, but it turns out that the numbers on various electrical devices do actually have a standardized meaning. It's governed by DIN standard 72552, and the following link summarizes them:
http://www.sealtd.net/quattro/ishamrese ... inals.html
(If the link is broken, just search the web for "DIN 72552")

For example, 15 on the ignition switch is the switched + battery output from the ignition switch, and 50 is the control for the starter motor (the starter solenoid). So now you know what the terminal numbers on the back of your ignition switch mean, as well as the voltage regulator, alternator, etc, etc. Hooray!

Turns out there is method in the madness. I have not yet found what "INT" means, but I'm still looking.

-Bryan
I love how other countries just kind of yoink German DIN norms. Pretty much the entire UK is built to German spec :D

DIN 824-A was the bane of my existence in college: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mfDtQaluXvg We had professors that would flunk you if you fucked it up.
18Fiatsandcounting
Posts: 3798
Joined: Fri Mar 15, 2019 11:23 pm
Your car is a: 1969 and 1971 124 spiders
Location: San Francisco Bay Area

Re: The meaning of ignition switch labels

Post by 18Fiatsandcounting »

SteinOnkel wrote:DIN 824-A was the bane of my existence in college: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mfDtQaluXvg
Ausgezeichnet! Now we know why the German trains run on time. :D

-Bryan
18Fiatsandcounting
Posts: 3798
Joined: Fri Mar 15, 2019 11:23 pm
Your car is a: 1969 and 1971 124 spiders
Location: San Francisco Bay Area

Re: The meaning of ignition switch labels

Post by 18Fiatsandcounting »

RRoller123 wrote:Internal connection? Shared with another terminal? INT
Maybe. INT is connected to 30 (the brown wire) in all key positions except "Off", so I believe one function is the outside lights on early spiders, where you could leave the parking lights on even when the key was removed (steering lock mode). Not headlights or anything else, just the parking lights.

My '69 has this function, but my '71 does not. Fiat probably figured out very quickly that too many people were leaving their parking lights on and running down the batteries...

-Bryan
SteinOnkel
Posts: 1000
Joined: Tue Feb 19, 2019 9:31 pm
Your car is a: 1978 124 Spider 1800

Re: The meaning of ignition switch labels

Post by SteinOnkel »

18Fiatsandcounting wrote:
SteinOnkel wrote:DIN 824-A was the bane of my existence in college: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mfDtQaluXvg
Ausgezeichnet! Now we know why the German trains run on time. :D

-Bryan
Ehhh...I think they're 6th in the global ranking.

But there was a conductor that made sure to stop the train in the exact same spot every morning when I got on. Super regional train, though. The route went over this: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Altenbeke ... ny2007.jpg

Super pretty. Anyway, what were we talking about? Oh yes, the wiring terminals. Yes, they are normed. Also, I'm pretty sure the bolts on these cars are normed as well. That's why they are all 10,13,15,17,19mm. The newer norm (90's) are 12, 14, 16, 18 and so on. And nowadays I think they use almost exclusively inner multipoint.
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