Hemi Dart,
I found the problem, after pulling off lots of wiring armor for a few hours. Howard was right, the ground wire goes under the fuse box on the fender, to the wiring harness along the driver fender. From there, it splits three ways including to a junction with a bunch of ground wires which is attached to the driver fender just behind the fender fuse box.
After tracing many wires, I found that the main wire that goes from the battery positive to the 120A fuse to the wiring harness along the front of the engine was worn through on the shock tower. When this happened, it blew my 120 amp fuse which stopped the alternator from charging my battery. Through my previous tests I thought the grid heater might be stuck on so I disconnected the heater grid wires and started the engine. When I did this, the ground wire caught fire. But now it all makes sense.
When I disconnectd the heater grid wires, I disconnected a very good ground wire as well as a positive wire. Since the alternator was charging and the wire from the alt. goes to the 120A fuse, it was grounding out on the shock tower, therefore energizing my frame. Since the ground wire that burned up is attached to a ground wire on the fender, it ended up continuing the charging fom the frame ground to the ground on the brake booster. The small 18g. wire coudn't take all that power and burned.
Hemi,
Have you ever blown your 120A fuse before or maybe done some welding on your frame? This probably could have been what caused yours to burn. If you have burned a 120 fuse before, maybe you have rubbed your wire through also and it happens to not be touching anymore.
Either way CHECK THE WIRE FROM THE 120 AMP FUSE ALONG YOUR SHOCK TOWER IF IT IS RUBBING ON YOUR SHOCK TOWER IT IS A DEFINITE FIRE HAZARD!!! Sorry for rambling so long.
By the way Howard, thanks for taking the time to look that information up for me.
Garry.