cmroles
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Today while tinkering around with my M1009 I decided to do a little investigation into the dim backlighting for the gauges. The light bulbs all work, but seem to be fairly dim....to the point where its difficult to read the speedometer at night.
I pulled out the instrument cluster face and removed the bulb socket for the Voltmeter. I then connected my multi-meter to the contacts in the socket and measured the voltage while turning the dash dimmer through its range.
1. The dash dimmer starts out at 0VDC as expected when the switch is all the way clockwise (dash lights off / circuit "open")
2. As the switch is rotated counter-clockwise it begins to read 8.5VDC (dash lights on but all the way dim)
3. As I continue rotating counter-clockwise the voltage climbs to a maximum of ~10.8VDC (switch rotated all the way counter-clockwise)
Now, this should be a 12V circuit, but it seems to max out at 10.8VDC. This looks to me like its falling about 1.2V short of its full potential. Since the difference between minimum / maximum brightness is only 2.3V (8.5V - 10.8V) this could possibly be a significant loss of lighting ability.
My suspician is that the headlight switch / dash dimmer is the problem. The dash dimmer is probably nothing more than a variable resistor, and is not going fully "short" when its rotated to the stop.
Has anyone else done this same test, and if so, what did the results look like? I am almost tempted to jump the wires to the dash dimmer straight across to see if the increase to a full 12V makes a big difference.
I pulled out the instrument cluster face and removed the bulb socket for the Voltmeter. I then connected my multi-meter to the contacts in the socket and measured the voltage while turning the dash dimmer through its range.
1. The dash dimmer starts out at 0VDC as expected when the switch is all the way clockwise (dash lights off / circuit "open")
2. As the switch is rotated counter-clockwise it begins to read 8.5VDC (dash lights on but all the way dim)
3. As I continue rotating counter-clockwise the voltage climbs to a maximum of ~10.8VDC (switch rotated all the way counter-clockwise)
Now, this should be a 12V circuit, but it seems to max out at 10.8VDC. This looks to me like its falling about 1.2V short of its full potential. Since the difference between minimum / maximum brightness is only 2.3V (8.5V - 10.8V) this could possibly be a significant loss of lighting ability.
My suspician is that the headlight switch / dash dimmer is the problem. The dash dimmer is probably nothing more than a variable resistor, and is not going fully "short" when its rotated to the stop.
Has anyone else done this same test, and if so, what did the results look like? I am almost tempted to jump the wires to the dash dimmer straight across to see if the increase to a full 12V makes a big difference.
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