The Jim Carter harness arrived and I must say I was impressed. The wires are heavily insulated, have connectors on them that match the application, and everything is protected within some woven plastic (vinyl?) sheath that looks great.
One of the two modifications I had to make was to cut off the four
butt connectors that run to the kickdown switch and replace them with
female bullet connectors that fit the posts of the kickdown switch.
You can see that everything is labeled well. When I test-fit the harness in the engine compartment, I found that every wire length was perfect for the length and path of the connections. Using my shop manual and the RPO 315 pages, I tried to install everything as it was from the factory. During the test-fit, I found these
dimples in the firewall; two of which lines up with the holes in my original relay. I
drilled them for metal screws and they were a perfect fit.
Here's how the
main harness and relay setup looked on the firewall during initial installation. May do something with the brown power wire that runs to the non-resisted side of the ballast resistor to clean things up, but the harness fit perfectly.
Here's the cluster of four wires I added the bullet connectors to and how they fit the
kickdown switch. Note that the length is perfect. Someone put thought into this.
I
fabricated the
bracket that the kickdown sits on from a diagram provided to me by rfs56trk and a couple of pictures of an original bracket from eBay. The tab that rides the throttle rod uses a cable clamp to hold it in position. Pretty neat homemade rig.
Here's the portion of the harness that travels down the transmission tunnel/firewall area down to the transmission. Perfect length. And this is the
solenoid section installed. My truck always had this padded loop on the upper right transmission side cover bolt that I never understood what it was for. Now I know. Keeps the harness secure and away from the moving parts. And again, the length of the wires fit perfectly my
overdrive solenoid setup. This was the other modification I had to make; The terminal loop was just a hair small for the #4 terminal post on the solenoid, so I cut a kerf in it and widened it out to the correct size. Took ten seconds.
So the verdict? I got a $26 wiring harness that would have cost me more in parts to fabricate. It installed perfectly to the factory locations specified by Chevy in my manual. It was sturdy and well-insulated. And it was $70 cheaper than the exact same type harness on the other sites.
The two modifications I had to make were probably required so that the harness could fit with what consumers have encountered in their builds. My mods required minimal tools and mere seconds to make. Only other note is that the wiring diagram, being that of the original Chevy one, was a bit sparse. However, it was labeled to help us novices and, once I got over my initial worries and started to test-fit the thing, the diagram made perfect sense.
Well done, Jim Carter. More business coming your way.
Jim