clinto
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After searching for a good hour, I have learned everything there is to know about CUCV horn diodes and that there are over half a dozen threads about off-centered steering wheels................ and there are lots of folks who can't get their horns to work, but nothing like what I have. I can't get my horn to stop working.
So I had to do a ton of stuff to clintogf's M1009: Had to replace the instrument cluster (bad printed circuit board-thanks hovenga67), found a broken wiring harness ground wire under the dash (thanks Westech), had to replace the ignition switch (thanks Mangus580), etc.
In the process of doing this, the rod that actuates the dimmer switch fell out so I had to break the column down to get it back in.
I hit the snag putting everything back together. It appears to me that these vehicles don't have a positive stop for the steering wheel to bottom out against. I didn't have any "left over" parts when I put everything back together. On all the vehicles I have serviced in the past, the steering wheel would bottom out before the nut did. This kept you from over tightening the steering wheel and putting it on too deep.
When I put the nut on this one, it sucked the wheel all the way down on to the column to the point that it didn't turn freely-obviously too tight.
So I pulled it off until it looked and felt right, then finished reassembling it.
Now the horn is stuck on whenever the lights are on. I can spin the steering wheel back and forth and the horn will click, so I know the wheel is the issue.
So what did I do wrong? Do I need to just pull the wheel "up" until the horn stops blowing or did I miss a component that controls the depth of the wheel on the steering shaft?
Thanks
C
So I had to do a ton of stuff to clintogf's M1009: Had to replace the instrument cluster (bad printed circuit board-thanks hovenga67), found a broken wiring harness ground wire under the dash (thanks Westech), had to replace the ignition switch (thanks Mangus580), etc.
In the process of doing this, the rod that actuates the dimmer switch fell out so I had to break the column down to get it back in.
I hit the snag putting everything back together. It appears to me that these vehicles don't have a positive stop for the steering wheel to bottom out against. I didn't have any "left over" parts when I put everything back together. On all the vehicles I have serviced in the past, the steering wheel would bottom out before the nut did. This kept you from over tightening the steering wheel and putting it on too deep.
When I put the nut on this one, it sucked the wheel all the way down on to the column to the point that it didn't turn freely-obviously too tight.
So I pulled it off until it looked and felt right, then finished reassembling it.
Now the horn is stuck on whenever the lights are on. I can spin the steering wheel back and forth and the horn will click, so I know the wheel is the issue.
So what did I do wrong? Do I need to just pull the wheel "up" until the horn stops blowing or did I miss a component that controls the depth of the wheel on the steering shaft?
Thanks
C