I bypassed the ammeter when I converted to a GM 12SI Alternator earlier this year (just under 100A I believe). I was told this was a good idea because the stock ammeter can't take a full 100A hit (or much over 50A) for any extended period of time without melting.
I believe, at the time, I simply "taped off" the white/blue side of the ammeter - essentially it's now a dead end.
Confirmed in my build thread, part way down page 29:
https://forum.ih8mud.com/threads/th...in-refurbishing-a-1975-chevota.725833/page-29
The only disadvantage is that the ammeter now never goes above the middle of the gauge. It will show an amp drain, but never "charging."
As for the light bulbs - I'm running a diode to "fake" a single idiot light. This just adds resistance, but probably not generating a current draw, so I can't help you there. Fundamentally, if it's on a fuse, I'd wire it in, and try it - see if it blows the fuse. You're probably fine (talking a ridiculously small draw from those two bulbs) but you should be protected if it overloads.
I believe, at the time, I simply "taped off" the white/blue side of the ammeter - essentially it's now a dead end.
Confirmed in my build thread, part way down page 29:
https://forum.ih8mud.com/threads/th...in-refurbishing-a-1975-chevota.725833/page-29
The only disadvantage is that the ammeter now never goes above the middle of the gauge. It will show an amp drain, but never "charging."
As for the light bulbs - I'm running a diode to "fake" a single idiot light. This just adds resistance, but probably not generating a current draw, so I can't help you there. Fundamentally, if it's on a fuse, I'd wire it in, and try it - see if it blows the fuse. You're probably fine (talking a ridiculously small draw from those two bulbs) but you should be protected if it overloads.