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You could have continuity to both ends of the wire in the column and still be grounding inside the column too. Check continuity between one end of the wire and the column itself to rule this out.I checked both steering columns for continuity and both check out to be good.
I never thought of that! Test #3 for the day!You could have continuity to both ends of the wire in the column and still be grounding inside the column too. Check continuity between one end of the wire and the column itself to rule this out.
His mentioning that disconnecting wire 25 from the horn switch stops the horns from sounding is what leads me to believe the switch is providing GND when it shouldn't be.You could have continuity to both ends of the wire in the column and still be grounding inside the column too. Check continuity between one end of the wire and the column itself to rule this out.
#25 is the only wire in the column. The button connects it to Ground when pressed. If #25 grounds inside the column then the switch is bypassed and the horn will stay on indefinitely. He stated that he removed the wire to the button at the BOTTOM of the column which would take the button, and any short, out of the circuit simultaneously. If he disconnected the button at the top from wire #25 then I'd be inclined to agree with you since the circuit is being broken between the places in question. A diagram from the P2P is below.His mentioning that disconnecting wire 25 from the horn switch stops the horns from sounding is what leads me to believe the switch is providing GND when it shouldn't be.
This is the comment that leads me to believe it may not be a shorted wire inside the column. Unless the short was taken away at the same time wire 25 was removed from the horn switch. Thorough investgation of the wire 25 insulation may reveal whether or not a short is occuring.The only wire that will stop the horn is disconnecting 25 from the horn switch located at the bottom of the steering column.
Been there before. It's when more than one seemigly impossible sepetate problems occur that the head scratching really begins!I was in a mess like this with my fuel gauge. Big surprise. I swapped gauge, NG. Put original back. Swapped sender, still NG. I then connected the new gauge and new sender together on the bench and supplied 24v to it. It worked perfectly. I swapped both into the truck, and the system works perfectly. Both my original gauge and sender were bad. Trying to diagnose just one by swapping parts didn't solve it, and it was such a simple system. If this keeps driving you nuts, you may need to see if you can get it to work properly once removed from the truck and place the horn system on a bench with external power supply. That would at least tell you if the problem is with the horns and attached solenoid, or vehicle side wiring. Maybe you have a spider lodged in the solenoid, or the solenoid has a short to ground inside its case, or a solenoid spring or seal is not together correct and the air pressure is blowing it open. It should be a simple system, and a DVOM should be able to tell if the issue is mechanical or electrical.
Actually I don't think there is anything wrong with your tester. Touch the test leads together and see what kind of difference the readings are. If they are more accurate then the variation you see may be a clue that there is a conductor/wire touching GND somewhere. This is typical when the short is not making a good enough connection to get repeatable ohm reading however it is good enough to activate a circuit. I think you are finally onto something!Alright, I did the test that doghead suggested and something seemed weird with my ohm tester, So I put the 2 leads together and 1.8 So that was alright. So I took them apart for about 5 seconds reconnected them and it was 7. did it again and what do ya know 15 something. So I can't rely on this tester and have to get a new one and redo all of these tests. I just LOVE IT!!!!
I don't think it's anything to be concerned about. You could try some light sandpaper on the test leads to clean off any oxidation buildup.My previous post was just the wires from the tester no circuit involved. That's why I believe my tester may be faulty. THe tester wires shouldn't change ohms by that much should they?
Yes it should work with a jumper to the solenoid. You may have more than just a shorted wire problem. The switch could be defective, or the ground on the other side of the switch is not connected well etc.Ok, I did all the tests that were suggested and even made a seperate wire from the solenoid to the horn switch. The horn didn't blow at 60, but at 120 I pushed the horn button and it still didn't work. I redid the Doghead test and it said the wire was grounding somewhere. But by bypassing that shouldn't the horn work?
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