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Went back out this morning and now the headlights don't work either and I found a 10a fuse under the hood blown. I replaced it and now every time I cut the headlights on it pops.
Sounds like you may have a short somewhere. If a cut or open wire is arcing itself to a ground that is close by, you could definitely blow fuses a lot. My Colt had a broken blinker wire that a mouse had chewed in half at the previous owners house. It took me over a week to track down the problem and find it. The broken wire ended up being in the fender well and very hard to find. Mine wasn't coming in contact with any ground, but moral of that story is.... Take your time and be patient, you will find it.
Get a good volt meter (not the AutoZone kind) and start checking voltage to and from the dimmer switch. Find where that terminates to and then follow the new route. This is easy to do if your wiring diagram has the correct colors and pin-outs on it. If you come to an area where all of the sudden you don't have power anymore, you will have to start probing the wire through the insulation with the lead to narrow down your search area. Back track until you find the problem.
Looking for a voltage while dealing with an open will work, however when dealing with a short the fuse will blow and the only voltage will be on the battery side of the open fuse.
I would find a proper circuit breaker, to save on fuses, and start removing parts of the the
effected voltage's distribution. Ideally divide the circuit in half and move on. Two 5amp breakers in parallel will work for you, as long as their resistance is matched(forget about the matched resistance comment, it should not be a factor unless the breaker is bad).