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Where to Ground for Auxilliary Lighting

McHenry2500

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I was looking through other posts and didn't see this answered somewhere else so I thought I'd just post something and hope someone with more experience replies.

I am installing some LED lights onto my brush guard this weekend and wiring them into the existing AUX switches (using AUX1) but was wondering where do I need to ground them at? I've always just installed aftermarket switches but I want to use the existing upfitter switch.


I'll try to get some progress pictures this weekend as I go along.
 

jkbrereton

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Should be able to ground to your frame

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BULLSANDBUCKSHUNTER

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I put a ground lug with5wires on it on that black cross frame piece near (above) aux sw connectors. Makes it easy to add all my future items and run the wires neat and professionally and keep everything organized and easy to access. If i dont us them all no worries as its a ground and doesnt matter just needs good metal frame connection. My rear lights ground will just get bolted to frame back there to save some wire.
 

99ls1tj

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This reminded me of a youtube video I watched recently. At around 11:11 to 13:00 he states the ground wire is not needed because the aux switches are already grounded. It didn't make sense to me, but he did not use the ground wire. Maybe the light itself is grounded to the frame when installed???

 

Brutal_HO

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This reminded me of a youtube video I watched recently. At around 11:11 to 13:00 he states the ground wire is not needed because the aux switches are already grounded. It didn't make sense to me, but he did not use the ground wire. Maybe the light itself is grounded to the frame when installed???


Must be picking up a ground somewhere. No ground, no voltage flow.

AUX circuits are grounded so yes, just picking up power from one and ground anywhere works. There is a single ground at the AUX firewall connectors if needed for something.

1609446951061.png
 

gmdog2

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I used body mount grounds, they r located all over the frame. The schematics are on Ram trucks upfitters area


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eng23ine

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most quality lights will be housing grounded (the mounting provides ground), so there isn't any real need for a ground wire.

I usually pull 14ga duplex for wiring so I'll go ahead and attach the ground lead and terminate it to an existing chassis ground.
 

H3LZSN1P3R

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most quality lights will be housing grounded (the mounting provides ground), so there isn't any real need for a ground wire.

I usually pull 14ga duplex for wiring so I'll go ahead and attach the ground lead and terminate it to an existing chassis ground.
Leds are never housing grounded even the industry best rigid lights have a positive and negative lead, same with KC and PIAA even the halogens have a negative lead i have never seen a quality light without a ground lead except grote the halogens dont have a negative lead.....and if the mounting surface is painted it will not ground thats why the good companys do not use a housing ground
 

eng23ine

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Leds are never housing grounded even the industry best rigid lights have a positive and negative lead, same with KC and PIAA even the halogens have a negative lead i have never seen a quality light without a ground lead except grote the halogens dont have a negative lead.....and if the mounting surface is painted it will not ground thats why the good companys do not use a housing ground
I stand corrected then....learned something new!
 

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