DeltaNu1142
RVF Newbee
Hello RVF!
I joined this morning to ask an electrical question. I'm an electrical guy... I do all my own wiring. I'm setting up a vehicle for flat-towing, and there's something I can't get my head around.
My tow vehicle (Ford F150) has OEM 7-pin and 4-pin sockets. They both work just fine for everything I've needed to tow.
As part of all of the flat-tow gear I've amassed, I have a coiled 7-pin to round 6-pin cable. Both ends are female. It looks like this:
7-pin goes to the truck; 6-pin, by process of elimination, goes to the towed vehicle ('05 Jeep LJR, for what it's worth).
Yesterday, I wired up my towed vehicle's tail lights to a 4-pin plug using a harness sourced from Curt... it tests well, plugged directly into my truck. It has three exposed male pins and one female pin... this one, exactly:
Everything makes sense so far. This is the plug you'd expect to see on a trailer/towed vehicle.
Now... because I'll be using a supplemental braking system, I want to keep the towed vehicle's battery charged up. But I don't need the reverse pin--and the 7-pin plug is huge--so I've decided to install a 6-pin socket at the front of the Jeep. It will have to be the opposite gender of the coiled 6-pin end... so, male exposed pins. This is where things get weird.
This is what I found to install at the front of the Jeep:
This is also supplied by Curt, and they call it a 4-way vehicle-side to 6-pin round adapter. It's very obviously intended to have the 4-pin plugged into the tow vehicle, with the loose wires connected to power/ground/brake on the tow vehicle, and provide a socket with male pins to connect a cable to the towed vehicle! But... my coiled cable has female pins.
Electrically... I have no problem with this. I'll snip the 4-pin to 6-pin adapter, add the other-gender 4-pin plug, and install it on my Jeep. The small end of my coiled cable will plug into that. But from a compatibility perspective... what is the deal here? Am I totally misunderstanding how these plugs are supposed to be used? My 7-pin to round-6-pin cable isn't a unicorn... it looks like the blue one above and just about every other one I'm seeing for sale. Have I got this all wrong?
Thanks for reading, and for any input you might have.
I joined this morning to ask an electrical question. I'm an electrical guy... I do all my own wiring. I'm setting up a vehicle for flat-towing, and there's something I can't get my head around.
My tow vehicle (Ford F150) has OEM 7-pin and 4-pin sockets. They both work just fine for everything I've needed to tow.
As part of all of the flat-tow gear I've amassed, I have a coiled 7-pin to round 6-pin cable. Both ends are female. It looks like this:
7-pin goes to the truck; 6-pin, by process of elimination, goes to the towed vehicle ('05 Jeep LJR, for what it's worth).
Yesterday, I wired up my towed vehicle's tail lights to a 4-pin plug using a harness sourced from Curt... it tests well, plugged directly into my truck. It has three exposed male pins and one female pin... this one, exactly:
Everything makes sense so far. This is the plug you'd expect to see on a trailer/towed vehicle.
Now... because I'll be using a supplemental braking system, I want to keep the towed vehicle's battery charged up. But I don't need the reverse pin--and the 7-pin plug is huge--so I've decided to install a 6-pin socket at the front of the Jeep. It will have to be the opposite gender of the coiled 6-pin end... so, male exposed pins. This is where things get weird.
This is what I found to install at the front of the Jeep:
This is also supplied by Curt, and they call it a 4-way vehicle-side to 6-pin round adapter. It's very obviously intended to have the 4-pin plugged into the tow vehicle, with the loose wires connected to power/ground/brake on the tow vehicle, and provide a socket with male pins to connect a cable to the towed vehicle! But... my coiled cable has female pins.
Electrically... I have no problem with this. I'll snip the 4-pin to 6-pin adapter, add the other-gender 4-pin plug, and install it on my Jeep. The small end of my coiled cable will plug into that. But from a compatibility perspective... what is the deal here? Am I totally misunderstanding how these plugs are supposed to be used? My 7-pin to round-6-pin cable isn't a unicorn... it looks like the blue one above and just about every other one I'm seeing for sale. Have I got this all wrong?
Thanks for reading, and for any input you might have.