$500 parts car means a quick roadtrip:
It doesn't have a drivetrain or a key, has a salvage title, and it was an automatic, but hey, $500 and the chassis is straight other than a bend in the PS front bumper attachment region. First order of business was to cut the steering lock off it so we could push it inside at home, not certain if it has any future other than to be cut up for parts yet.
Wiring stuff arrived while we were out doing that, so yesterday was endless depinning, snipping, checking my notes, installing new ends, and building out my fancy new connectors. Hood in "insert crowbar service position" for this:
Once I got the 33 pin for the smaller wires done I hooked up the remains of the stock connector alongside it and started the car to make sure if I screwed up I'd at least know which connector it was:
Nothing seemed wrong so I shut it back off, hit the killswitch, and set about the other connector which is mostly larger power wires. After over 7 hours of standing awkwardly over the fender and 108 individual terminals, this is where I got to:
Obviously it needs tidying, strain relief, and loom, and that plate I had made needs to get welded to a bracket, but dammit it runs and no amount of wiggling the wires causes a check engine light! I didn't drive it like this because I don't want all this work ruined by flopping onto something it shouldn't, so next weekend will start with the rest of the work required to make this nice. Bye bye broken OEM connector, I hope you don't come back to haunt me somehow:
I took detailed notes so I should be able to make an adapter harness in the future, and now with the parts car I can harvest an OEM firewall side plug and wires to do that- having an adapter would allow me to drop in an engine with a stock harness in a pinch.