Sorry, Dan and everyone else. I was wrong. I got overconfident.
I still haven`t found the reason why I`m blowing out #6 fuse every time I crank the engine. It's true that it's supposed to handle only the heater blower, the CSV and the IP Start Solenoid, but I went back and searched my 50 page Assembly Sequence document and found that I had connected a heavy wire to #6 circuit that feeds power to what I've called an Accessory Switched 12V Power Distribution Barrier Block. It's a small box full of places to access switched 12V to run little accessories like a backup camera, a front camera, a GPS power supply, heater and AC blower motor (note that the original heater motor and switch is no longer connected), and a vacuum cruise control "control circuit". Then I saw something really stupid. Downstream of the 25A fuse (#6), there's an in-line 30A fuse for the AC blower motor.
I still can't figure out what is happening because none of those things are turned on, so they are not drawing any power.
Anyway, until I started removing shims from the Barometric Compensator, none of my attempts to start the car brought me to notice that #6 fuse was blown. That's probably because until then, the IP, with the BC 6 shims, was so rich that non of the non-working cold start devices were even noticeable. Remember that all of my significant leaning out of the fuel system happened in the same day. The sequence was: Start the engine rich, try to keep it running to do a split linkage test, stop the engine, remove shim(s), restart the engine which is now warmer and still rich, do another split linkage test, stop the engine, etc., etc. By the time it was really idling nicely, it was also at running temperature and restarted instantly.
The next day, it took forever to start because: 1) it was room temperature (cold), 2) too lean to start easily without the cold start devices working.
When I noticed the blown #6 fuse and replaced it, the next time I cranked, I used the remote starter connected between the B+ and the "G" terminal on the TTS.
My ear was really close to the #6 fuse when it went "POP".
Now, here I am trying to find out why.
Since my 230SL is a manual transmission, my #3 fuse is connected to nothing. I wonder if I can reconnect that "Accessory Switched 12V Power Distribution Barrier Block" wire to #3 fuse, which is unused, with another 25A fuse and run the #6 fuse with only the CSV and IP Start Solenoid.
Any opinions? Right now, I'm a retired mechanical engineer drowning in an electrical engineering lake.
Suggestions? I'm looking for reasons why what's happening is happening, but I am also looking for solutions without purist prejudices.
Tom Kizer
PS: I've checked all the cold start devices except the WRD and the TTS hot resistance values but that's next. Everything else checks out perfectly including the wires from device to device and from the battery. The WRD doesn't draw power so that should have no effect. WRD requires coolant draining which I'm doing now.