Date: Sat, 12 Oct 2019 00:30:10 +0000
Reply-To: Richard Koerner <rjkinpb@SBCGLOBAL.NET>
Sender: Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From: Richard Koerner <rjkinpb@SBCGLOBAL.NET>
Subject: Re: Strange electrical question.
In-Reply-To: <CAMOH8LK6S8wjRnyiKOzm3Sgjpm-kF6hpR0=qmF5ZvKEHE6atiQ@mail.gmail.com>
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A well aimed shot of spray electrical contact cleaner into Hazard Switch, followed up by the recommended few dozen cycles of rapid exercise to clean and brighten the contacts, would be an additional suggestion. This has solved mysterious stuff for me. Maybe first try just exercising switch; if no luck, then go for the spray contact cleaner. Also, brightening the contacts of the switch where they mate with the connector. Personally, I add a swipe of Vaseline to those external switch tabs....seems to help dissolve corrosion and prevent future; a few cycles of plug and unplug wouldn't hurt either. But, it's probably mostly inside the switch with ancient contact surfaces where your problem might be.
Do this with switch removed, please. I kinda temporarily messed up the finish of some of the plastic in the surrounding area due to some of the solvent properties of that spray stuff. I fixed it all back again with some Aerospace 303 Spray on plastic housing and lens. (I think that's it, the expensive stuff, available through GoWesty and West Marine and others. It's magic! Not the "greasy kid stuff" like ArmorAll. But am typing this from a campground in Northern California...so I can't go out to the garage to check.)
Rich
San Diego
On Friday, October 11, 2019, 2:55:00 PM PDT, David Beierl <dbeierl@GMAIL.COM> wrote:
The signal indicator gets 12V from the panel at key-on, and grounds through
the signal lamps; so it will light whenever the lights on one or both sides
are connected but not powered (power for them comes from the flasher
relay). This is why the indicator flashes out of phase with the signals.
Note that this means the light will glow even if the turn signal fuse is
blown.
As Dennis said -- everything goes through the hazard switch. It has to
supply power to the flasher relay from unswitched power for four-ways, or
from switched power for the turn signals. It also has to connect both sets
of lights to the flasher for four-ways, or let the turn signal connect them
for turn signals. It's the prime suspect any time anything goes wrong. A
few dozen cycles of rapid exercise will often help it.
Yrs,
d
On Fri, Oct 11, 2019 at 8:56 AM Ralph Meyermann <ralphmeyermann@gmail.com>
wrote:
> 82 diesel Westy, I threw a rod last November and when it happened I
> noticed the green turn signal light came on and is now staying on?
>
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