NateDogg024
New Member
I'm out of ideas here can anybody please help. I've checked, checked, and rechecked and I cant seem to find out why only the passenger side brake light wont work.
I have four different circuit boards that I'm testing with, two LH (left hand) and two RH (right hand), all four work in the LH plug (tail, blinker, brake, and revers) and everything minus the brake light work in the RH plug, so I'm fairly confident all the circuit boards are okay.
I've tried many combinations of blubs and still no brake light from the RH side. I have two different wire harnesses and both are acting the same way (one is in vary bad shape and the other I have looked over and made good, with new connections and soldered).
I've used my volt meter and have traced voltage all the way from the pedal to the light sockets, on both sides, and all wires; and I have 11.98-12 volts all the way back on all the wires that correspond to there functions.
I've also used my test light and I have a light on, as well as voltage, when the tails should be on(brown wire), blinker when on(RH dark green wire LH yellow wire), and brake lights when on(same dark green and yellow wire), but, help me understand this, when I put in a bulb no brake light on the RH side.
I have nearly zero ohms with power off (00.4 ohms, so I'd call that zero) on all the ground wires to the frame rail. With a fresh bare metal contact to the frame.
After all of these checks and passes why no RH brake light?
Could this be my problem???
When power is on and testing is being done at the light sockets I have 11.98 volts on both + (positive) sides of the light socket (tail and brake) and resistance on the - (negative) side of the light socket. The LH side reads just over 9 ohms and the RH side reads over 13 ohms. Why is this?
When power is off zero ohms to ground. When power is on high ground. I should probably know this but I'm stumped. What am I missing???
Thanks for taking the time to read any and all suggestions will be appreciated.
Nate
I have four different circuit boards that I'm testing with, two LH (left hand) and two RH (right hand), all four work in the LH plug (tail, blinker, brake, and revers) and everything minus the brake light work in the RH plug, so I'm fairly confident all the circuit boards are okay.
I've tried many combinations of blubs and still no brake light from the RH side. I have two different wire harnesses and both are acting the same way (one is in vary bad shape and the other I have looked over and made good, with new connections and soldered).
I've used my volt meter and have traced voltage all the way from the pedal to the light sockets, on both sides, and all wires; and I have 11.98-12 volts all the way back on all the wires that correspond to there functions.
I've also used my test light and I have a light on, as well as voltage, when the tails should be on(brown wire), blinker when on(RH dark green wire LH yellow wire), and brake lights when on(same dark green and yellow wire), but, help me understand this, when I put in a bulb no brake light on the RH side.
I have nearly zero ohms with power off (00.4 ohms, so I'd call that zero) on all the ground wires to the frame rail. With a fresh bare metal contact to the frame.
After all of these checks and passes why no RH brake light?
Could this be my problem???
When power is on and testing is being done at the light sockets I have 11.98 volts on both + (positive) sides of the light socket (tail and brake) and resistance on the - (negative) side of the light socket. The LH side reads just over 9 ohms and the RH side reads over 13 ohms. Why is this?
When power is off zero ohms to ground. When power is on high ground. I should probably know this but I'm stumped. What am I missing???
Thanks for taking the time to read any and all suggestions will be appreciated.
Nate