by kayakrguy » Wed Apr 16, 2008 8:56 pm
Hi Folks,
First, thanks to everyone for their replies. Really focused and motivated me.
Good News...after Miriam's suggestion about grounding the lights, I decided to do that FIRST The reason being that MJ and others had suggested the same thing a long time ago, but I never got around to it.
So, I connected both lamps directly to the ground coming from the car.
Bad News...with the new grounds, all the problems got WORSE
For one thing, the left trailer tail light quit working, period. The left turn signal no longer worked on either the car or the trailer...BUT...the left turn signal indicator on the dash turned on and stayed on, even after I turned off the turn signal. The emergency flashers no longer wlorked on the trailer and the only running lights and turn signal that worked were the right ones. Brake lights STILL did not work.
I knew I had a problem.
So, using the trusty tutorial for testing the wiring on the Tow vehicle, I got my test light out and went through the drill. With the left turn signal on, nada. With the right turn signal on, nada. Basically the only thing that was ok was the ground. At that point I figured the connector was the problem. I called the folks who did the job and took it in....
Good News--it WAS the connector....they put a wrong one in...guy grabbed a box, gave it to the mechanic, so the mechanic put it in....problem was boxes are too similar, even tho they have different connector.
So things are fixed, got lights etc. The only thing I cannot figure out is: didn't the mechanic test his work before giving me the car the first time??? Ordinarily this place does A-1 work--in a substantial area of the Jersey shore, they are the hitch and wire place to go to--trucks especially.
Anyhow, thank you all very much!!
Jim
A disposition to preserve, and an ability to improve, taken together, would be my standard of a statesman...
But what is liberty without wisdom, and without virtue? It is the greatest of all possible evils; for it is folly, vice, and madness, without tuition or restraint.
Edmund Burke