TJW
Finally riding a big boys bike
I am a duffer when it comes to bicycle lights. I might know just enough to be dangerous but that is about it.
I'm trying to understand how the lights in my Mercury Pacemaker could have ever worked.
I'm told that they worked at one time.
Here are some pictures. It is obviously not the original setup. (NOTE: The horn button is there but the horn seems to be missing.)
I'm trying to figure out how this could be made to work. It gives me the impression that the switch literally turns on the lights (doesn't just create a ground).
If so, how would a battery have been hooked to the switch and to the dual lights? The battery tray is obviously improvised and I don't see any way that it could hold a battery that would make contact with the lights.
Is there a battery that could somehow be connected to the wires from the switch and from the dual lights?
Thanks to whomever can help solve this mystery for me.
This is a picture of what the battery tray looked like in an original Pacemaker:
I'm trying to understand how the lights in my Mercury Pacemaker could have ever worked.
I'm told that they worked at one time.
Here are some pictures. It is obviously not the original setup. (NOTE: The horn button is there but the horn seems to be missing.)
I'm trying to figure out how this could be made to work. It gives me the impression that the switch literally turns on the lights (doesn't just create a ground).
If so, how would a battery have been hooked to the switch and to the dual lights? The battery tray is obviously improvised and I don't see any way that it could hold a battery that would make contact with the lights.
Is there a battery that could somehow be connected to the wires from the switch and from the dual lights?
Thanks to whomever can help solve this mystery for me.
This is a picture of what the battery tray looked like in an original Pacemaker: