Quote:
Originally Posted by Keith 944
This Might be part of the problem, you get in an accident, shut your power off, first guy there thinks he’s turning it off and has turned it back on...
It should also be mandatory if you have one inside the car it moves the lever outside the car also, which I’m sure most people already do
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When I had a push-pull system, I had a cable running from the trunk switch to a lever in the cockpit, Pushing the lever physically moved the rod on the back bumper. Since emergency persons are trained to move that switch, they could possibly turn the car back on. My current setup is a rotary switch on the back deck that cuts all power between the battery and the car. The power feed into the cabin is through a continuous duty Cole Hearse solenoid connected to an aircraft switch on the console to energize it. If something goes haywire I can slap that switch and kill all the accessories and ignition power. There is still one hot wire in the cabin (the battery cable) but the juice isn't going anywhere. It's a quick way of shutting off the ignition and fuel pump without flipping multiple switches.