Look carefully at the relay with the piggy backed wires, they should go like this in order, GRAY, WHITE with a piggy backed WHITE WITH RED STRIPE, GRAY piggy backed with a BLACK WITH BLUE STRIPE, then, PINK AND BLACK. When you turn the key on battery voltage will flow from the ignition switch via a gray wire down the loom to the ecm relay, where the GRAY and BLACK AND BLUE PIGGY BACKED WIRES ARE.
The BLACK and BLUE wire goes to the ecu and battery voltage also goes through the relay coil to ground inside the ecu via the PINK and BLACK wire, this in turn turns the relay on closing the main contacts connecting battery voltage to the first gray wire at the relay and powers up the ecu, coils injectors ect.
Hook your test light or volt meter to the white and white and red wires where you had battery voltage, note what the voltage is, press the trim switch on the motor, and see what the voltage drops to.
If it falls to zero, you need to look at the terminal block in between the sixty and thiry anp fuse. Also when you turn the key to the start position there should be battery voltage on the gray wire with the black and blue piggy backed wire, do the same test on the white wire on the starter relay, note the voltage then get some one to turn the key to the start position note the voltage on the white wire, also there should be voltage on the yellow and green striped wire and the red wire, You have battery voltage at both relays like you should have, but whether it stays there with a load is another thing. Pressing the trim switch on the motor will load the circuit on the white with a red strip wire which supplies the trim.
If the battery voltage stays high or the test stays bright when you do the test, Look for the fifteen amp fuse off battery pos or go to your ignition switch and check for battery voltage on the white battery supply wire.
Do them tests and come back on the forum with your results. If you use a fused jumper wire from the white wire on the ecu relay to the gray wire and piggy backed and black and blue wire, you should power up the ecu and the controls, that by passes the ignition switch. be careful. Mate don't get confused with the plain red wire on the starter relay, it gets battery voltage when the key is in the start position.
The BLACK and BLUE wire goes to the ecu and battery voltage also goes through the relay coil to ground inside the ecu via the PINK and BLACK wire, this in turn turns the relay on closing the main contacts connecting battery voltage to the first gray wire at the relay and powers up the ecu, coils injectors ect.
Hook your test light or volt meter to the white and white and red wires where you had battery voltage, note what the voltage is, press the trim switch on the motor, and see what the voltage drops to.
If it falls to zero, you need to look at the terminal block in between the sixty and thiry anp fuse. Also when you turn the key to the start position there should be battery voltage on the gray wire with the black and blue piggy backed wire, do the same test on the white wire on the starter relay, note the voltage then get some one to turn the key to the start position note the voltage on the white wire, also there should be voltage on the yellow and green striped wire and the red wire, You have battery voltage at both relays like you should have, but whether it stays there with a load is another thing. Pressing the trim switch on the motor will load the circuit on the white with a red strip wire which supplies the trim.
If the battery voltage stays high or the test stays bright when you do the test, Look for the fifteen amp fuse off battery pos or go to your ignition switch and check for battery voltage on the white battery supply wire.
Do them tests and come back on the forum with your results. If you use a fused jumper wire from the white wire on the ecu relay to the gray wire and piggy backed and black and blue wire, you should power up the ecu and the controls, that by passes the ignition switch. be careful. Mate don't get confused with the plain red wire on the starter relay, it gets battery voltage when the key is in the start position.
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