Date: Mon, 21 Aug 2006 21:14:07 -0500
Reply-To: Jim Felder <felder@KNOLOGY.NET>
Sender: Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From: Jim Felder <felder@KNOLOGY.NET>
Subject: Re: Question about turn signal indicator light
In-Reply-To: <6da579340608210845o555ae7ebs47e0762d831c7a43@mail.gmail.com>
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John or anyone,
It would be helpful to know which terminal on the long connector into
the right side of the instrument cluster operates the turn signal. If
that's not getting 12 intermittently with the wipers, and the turn
signals are working, then the problem must be in the wiring between
the relay and the connector. If it is getting intermittent 12v with
the wipers, the problem must be either in the connector, the blue
foil or the LED itself.
Anyone know? Should I just trace down the blue-with-red to the
connector and test that?
We've had company in all week and though I've had time to change out
the instrument clusters (10 minutes) I haven't had time for the
troubleshooting.
Thanks,
Jim
On Aug 21, 2006, at 10:45 AM, John Bange wrote:
>> Today I swapped out that instrument console for yet another one I'd
>> collected. Now EVERYTHING works EXCEPT the turn signal indicator LED.
>>
>> Is that LED a common problem? Should I be looking for the wiring
>> somewhere else?
>
> Well, my original "no tach for you! Only clock!" instrument cluster
> had a bad oil pressure LED (no wonder the PO thought it had no oil
> pressure issues), and if you take apart the housing that holds them,
> you find that the LEDs are in slip-in connections. They're a little
> hard to get to, but they're easily replaced. This leads me to believe
> that they are considered a replaceable failure item, albeit a fairly
> uncommon one. But if you have it not working on TWO clusters, I'd say
> go ahead and pull the main connector for the dash module and make sure
> it's working at that point before futzing with that stupid flimsy blue
> plastic circuit. Near as I can figure without chasing lines all over
> the Bentley wiring diagram, the Blue-with-Red wire provides an
> intermittent ground path for that LED in time with the blinker. An ohm
> meter between that and chassis ground should give you an idea if it's
> working (for the sake of the meter check with it set to volts first,
> on the off chance I'm an idiot and it provides 12v, not ground;
> wouldn't be the first time I've misread a wiring diagram). Also check
> the mechanical condition of that pin on the connector, make sure it
> can make good contact with the folded over plastic foil sheet thing.
> If all that seems OK, then I'd check the LED.
> --
> John Bange
> '90 Vanagon - "Geldsauger"
>
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