very nice and slick. I couldn't find connectors. Would have built something very similar if I had. I prefer your way.@Tylus very well done. I actually just built pigtail harnesses that swap these circuits so the factory forward lamp harness doesn't have to be modified. That way it's plug and play and reversible.
Good catch. I didn't realize that the Z75 (Cadillac) was the only harness with position #6 being physically larger. I was reading that wrong.1. You mentioned the Y91 forward lamp harness is larger to allow for more voltage draw. However, the wire gauge sizes are similar across the suv platforms at the headlamp connectors. The only exceptions are for those with RPO 6J7 (for PPV highbeam flasher) and the Escalade DRL circuit. Both are 18AWG instead of 20AWG in those instances. What am I missing? In 2018, when GM began using the LED strip for DRLs on all Tahoes, the main harness change I see is the wire at position 6 on the headlamp connectors only being 18AWG and only describing it as the DRL Control circuit.
Looks like when the upgraded the 2018 models to LTZ function, they bumped the wire size to match Cadillac
Refer to Piece #13 and #14 below. The LTZ has piece #13. LS/LT has #14 (minus Y91 package)2. I also saw where you said the wiring diagram showed the LTZ LED strip being physically different. Can you expand on which diagram and where it shows that? I'm not seeing it.
I don't know if it's something we can retrofit or not.
Like I said above. I'm 99% positive the LTZ DRL is physically different. The Y91 electrical circuit has the logic module. And it looks like the PCM can command varied voltage to the LED strip to achieve different levels of brightness to those equipped.Getting the LED strip to have the same brightness as the LTZ version is what I've been working on. What I haven't determined yet is whether the LED strip hardware is different on the LTZ or if it's the circuitry/programming on the components inside the headlamp assembly. The parts catalog I can see doesn't show anything about the LED (only HID/non-HID assembly). Like @Kpwweb mentioned, I wonder if it's a PWM control issue where bypassing it with a relay would work. Although, if that's the case, I would think Gen5DIY's $230 LED DRL harness with its relays would address it. They make a point to state the LED brightness won't change. Maybe that's all their harness does, swap the circuits and use the DRL control to activate relays to provide a constant +12v. They even give the same disclaimer on park lamp/headlamp functionality change that you noted. What are your thoughts?
relays fail...sadly.The only other way I'm currently aware of to do this is with three relays. That allows the LED strip to function as DRLs and keep factory functionality with the other headlamp functions. That's the way @73Vetteman did it.
And I cannot remember the last time I ever needed my parking lamps and not needed the headlamps. It's a unnecessary complication that invites failure for me. Very cool though for the complete LTZ mimicry.
I'm not positive more voltage would help. The LED strip is already receiving nearly 12v. It's more a lumen issue. The LS/LT strip doesn't have the same lumen output that the LTZ does.I'm happy to build the pigtail harnesses with or without the relays for those interested. I'll even do the install with the relays if you'll come to me so I can verify the LED brightness. I'm in Mobile, AL.