So I have a issue with my 1983 109, on the way home I lost my low beams. High beams work and all the signals do what they should, but the low beam are not working. Can this be a switch issue? What steps should I look at in trouble shooting this. Thanks in advance.
Low beams not working
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Unhook the floor dimmer switch and then touch the green wire to each of the other two. If they both activate the lights (with the headlights switched on, the switch is the issue.
Very common in wet and snowy environments. Especially when salt is added to the equation.Bad gas mileage gets you to some of the greatest places on earth. -
I don't have a floor switch, I have the three position switch on the dash.
When in the up position its off, middle parking lights, down headlights. The high beams turn on, so would this be within the high and low beam switch in the steering column? I would be about to drive the truck if it wasn't the high beams.Comment
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Remove the grille on the front of the truck.
In the mess of wires under there, find where the big blue wire with a red tracer goes into the black rubber 4-way connector, along with the 2 smaller blue with red tracer wires.
Remove the wires and clean the bullet connectors and the 4 way connector's contact surfaces. Reassemble, (presuming the brittle metal on the inside of the 4 way connector has survived) then test low beams. If they still don't work, leave the lights on and mess around with the wires and connectors till good contact is made.
I'm very confident this is your issue, however, if it still doesn't work, check for 12 volts between the big blue/red tracer wire and a good ground and we'll go from there.
I'm sure somebody will be along shortly to say that the ground connections are faulty, but they're not.--Mark
1973 SIII 109 RHD 2.5NA Diesel
0-54mph in just under 11.5 minutes
(9.7 minutes now that she's a 3-door).Comment
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And, just in case you read that last post before I corrected it, you should be working the blue with RED tracer wires (dipped beam), not the blue with WHITE tracer wires (main beam) that I originally posted.--Mark
1973 SIII 109 RHD 2.5NA Diesel
0-54mph in just under 11.5 minutes
(9.7 minutes now that she's a 3-door).Comment
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Your problem isn't with the fuses and isn't terribly likely to be with the main/dipped switch on the stalk.
The schematic of the entire SIII electrical system is available on the RN online catalog. Just go under the "Series I, II III" menu and click on electrical. It'll be one of the two PDFs on the bottom of that page.
Or just click this I suppose: http://5037e1fccabb179f1658-62e5af32.../LR-page84.pdfLast edited by SafeAirOne; 12-30-2014, 12:58 AM.--Mark
1973 SIII 109 RHD 2.5NA Diesel
0-54mph in just under 11.5 minutes
(9.7 minutes now that she's a 3-door).Comment
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And just to help you make sense of the schematic, the headlamps (main AND dipped) get their power directly from the battery, via the light switch on the dash. Once this switch is closed, power for the headlamps (main AND dipped) goes through the main/dipped selector switch on the stalk, where the power is either sent down the blue/red wire to the dipped beams via the 4-way connector under the grille where it is split and sent to each headlamp OR down the blue/white wire to the main beams via their 4 way connector under the grille where it is split and sent to each headlamp.
After the power gets done making light in each of the headlamps, it is sent back to the battery through a ground wire attached to the radiator support panel above the grille. The same ground wire is used for the main AND dipped beams on each headlamp--That's how you know that the grounds are good--the main beam works just fine and it uses the same ground as the dipped beam.
So, if the main beams work fine, then the most likely place where the fault lies is in the connection where the power is split off to each of the headlamps.
There IS one caveat, however: If there was a short in the dipped beam circuit, say if the blue/red wire chafed through and grounded out against some metal while the headlights were on, then, being an un-fused circuit, the wire could have overheated and messed up the dipped beam contact on the switch on the stalk (melted the plastic around the contact).
This happened to me once and I had to disconnect the main beam circuit and use it to power the dipped beam circuit till I received a replacement stalk.
The odds are very low that this is your problem though.--Mark
1973 SIII 109 RHD 2.5NA Diesel
0-54mph in just under 11.5 minutes
(9.7 minutes now that she's a 3-door).Comment
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A test lamp can really help in finding where the lectricity is going....or not going. Highly recommeded bit of kit. OH!, and print out the schematic to take to the car and for future use....Comment
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Test lamp is a great help, start at the head lamp and work back to each connection, also have a meter nearby and check continuity from headlamp to each connection. Another hint, jumper wire from battery to headlamp, make sure both sides work, it does get rather embarassing when you find that the hi/lo side that doesnt work, it doesnt because its burned out.
Good hunting! BruceComment
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I was able to get into the front of the truck after removing the grill to find the connections. I noticed that they were all wrapped real tight with electrical tape and after pealing back the layers I finally found the Blue and Red wire. I removed the wire and sanded the connection and snapped it back in. Still nothing, so I tested the connection with a light tester and it doesn't seem to be getting any power. The high beams do, but not the the blue and reds. Where is the next area this could be checked? I attached a photo of what everything looks like under the grill.
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Well...Next stop for the blue/red on the upstream side is the contact on the stalk where the headlamp power is switched to go either to the high beam wire (which it does) or to the low beam circuit. This happens on the upper switch on part #25 on the schematic I linked to earlier.
While you're under the grille, if you remove the fat blue/white wire from its 4-way connector and plug it in place of the fat blue/red wire on that 4-way connector then turn on the HIGH beams, do your low beams now illuminate (you're using the high beam wire to supply power the low beams to make sure the low beam filaments aren't both burned out)?--Mark
1973 SIII 109 RHD 2.5NA Diesel
0-54mph in just under 11.5 minutes
(9.7 minutes now that she's a 3-door).Comment
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