dh,
I know what you mean about circuit board heaven. My venerable laptop died recently and Best Buys sold me a replacement that has several times the performance at about one fifth what the old one cost. I am still trying to figure out what to do with a little stack of hard drives that have accumulated from our defunct computers, going back almost twenty years. They all contain account and personal information and I am afraid to just put them in the trash although the drives are too small to be useful now.
Thank you for the link to your trailer lights from Harbor Freight. It is becoming clearer.

I am in the midst of rewiring my own trailer lights and have found it confusing at times. My trailer wiring is a mixture of the original Little Guy four-wire plug and 7-pin hitch and trailer connectors/wires that I added to accommodate trailer battery charging and electric brakes. Those were for-fun projects, mostly to keep me out of mischief.

My most recent changes began with a discovery that the 7-pin receptacle on the trailer tongue was overheating, melting almost. My question about that in a topic received a lot of helpful replies including one from Miriam. Several forum members led me to the problem and I am making changes now.
My question about your lighting is what are you doing with the 12V negative white wire for the trailer lights? I believe sometimes the white wire is connected to the trailer frame, with the light fixtures connected to the frame, and sometimes there is a white wire branching off each light fixture to the wiring harness. As far as I know either way is fine. Little Guy seems to have done some of both. Most of the light fixtures are mounted in something other than metal and there is a white wire attached either to the trailer frame or, where it was convenient, to the white wire in the wiring harness. The white wire in the harness is also connected to the trailer frame.
Bill
