3309077 - E1010 SUPPLY - Description

Description

The entire electrical system has been designed and constructed in accordance with the most up-to-date guidelines concerning safety and protection, especially against fire risks.

There are two main kinds of protection:

  • active protection, aimed at reducing possible causes of faults 'at source';
  • passive protection, aimed at minimizing the effects of a possible fault.
The first kind involves the thoughtful design of wiring, attentive to location and anchorage, and the careful planning of properly protected cable routes.Modifications have therefore been made to the alternator and starter motor cables, with the adoption of protective caps, etc.Passive protection instead includes all the interventions, which have always been adopted on vehicles, to reduce high fault currents (overload and short circuit).All the fuses included in the system have been rated on the basis of the nominal absorption of the loads which cannot be served simultaneously, and so as to ensure intervention in the case of a definite short circuit.All the electrical systems are supplied by the battery at a voltage of 12. V. The battery is, in turn, recharged by the alternator  See E5010  STARTING AND RECHARING during engine operation. The main supply lines are protected by 'maxifuses', grouped together in a container located in the engine compartment services compartment.The power supplies to all services and systems are protected by fuses grouped in the junction units, one of which is inside the passenger compartment and the other one which is in the engine compartment on the left side panel. The unattached fuses are located in the engine compartment near the rear bulkhead and in compartments protected by covers in the luggage compartment, one on the right hand side and the other on the left hand side behind the battery.All the power supplies are thus protected, except for the starter motor cable (battery-starter motor) and recharging cable (starter motor-alternator): these are protected by an additional shielded sheath.Some circuits are supplied continuously, even if the vehicle is stopped and the ignition is off, as they are connected directly to the battery.

Other circuits are supplied by turning the ignition key to various different positions:

  • when the key is inserted and turned to the first click, the ignition is turned on (MAR position) and several circuits are supplied, which are thus called 'ignition-operated' (lines 'INTE' and '15/54');
  • the second click - AVV (starting) position - supplies the starter motor (line '50'), disconnecting certain circuits (those which absorb greater power) thereby guaranteeing the maximum current flow to the actual starter motor ('INT/A' line).
The lines through which the supply is distributed to the various electrical devices are shown on the wiring diagrams relating to the various functions and systems. This general diagram shows all the lines which depart from the battery and the MAXIFUSE boxes; reference should be made to the specific diagrams for greater detail.