1973 Horn Don’t work |
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1973 Horn Don’t work |
MiniStevieG |
Feb 5 2019, 01:51 PM
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#1
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Member Group: Members Posts: 179 Joined: 25-January 19 From: Dallas, TX Member No.: 22,827 Region Association: Southwest Region |
Getting my new whip ready for inspection and discovered my horn has issues. The horn was disconnected from the bumper and now I know why. It won’t stop blowing when I hook the wire back up to the actual horn. I removed the horn assembly on the steering wheel and and for obvious reasons it stops because the mechanism is no longer grounded. I tested the ground wire on the steering wheel and can hear the relay clicking when I disconnect the actual horn so all is good with that. Everything makes sense up till now. Problem is, when I connect the ground wire the assembly and attach it to the steering wheel the horn won’t stop honking. I assume it’s staying grounded when I hook it up. Been troubleshooting it for a little while and I’m wondering what the issue might be. Any thoughts?
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Dave_Darling |
Feb 5 2019, 05:37 PM
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#2
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914 Idiot Group: Members Posts: 15,051 Joined: 9-January 03 From: Silicon Valley / Kailua-Kona Member No.: 121 Region Association: Northern California |
First--when you move the wire up the steering column so that the connector on the end is not touching a ground, does the horn still sound? If it does, you have a short somewhere and need to find it.
If that stops the horn from sounding then the circuit is probably OK. Check for electrical connectivity between the inner metal part visible in your photo and the outer metal part that has the tab in it. There should be ZERO connectivity, infinite resistance. If you have a short there, that is the cause of the horn sounding. There should be plastic spacers and washers between the inner and outer metal parts there. If someone put metal washers in, the screws will make contact with both and will cause them to be electrically connected together. Lastly, make sure that the wire doesn't get pinched against any metal bits when you put the button back on the wheel, and that the rubber "boot" actually pushes the button away from the steering wheel when you're not pushing it down. --DD |
MiniStevieG |
Feb 6 2019, 03:49 PM
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#3
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Member Group: Members Posts: 179 Joined: 25-January 19 From: Dallas, TX Member No.: 22,827 Region Association: Southwest Region |
First--when you move the wire up the steering column so that the connector on the end is not touching a ground, does the horn still sound? If it does, you have a short somewhere and need to find it. If that stops the horn from sounding then the circuit is probably OK. Check for electrical connectivity between the inner metal part visible in your photo and the outer metal part that has the tab in it. There should be ZERO connectivity, infinite resistance. If you have a short there, that is the cause of the horn sounding. There should be plastic spacers and washers between the inner and outer metal parts there. If someone put metal washers in, the screws will make contact with both and will cause them to be electrically connected together. Lastly, make sure that the wire doesn't get pinched against any metal bits when you put the button back on the wheel, and that the rubber "boot" actually pushes the button away from the steering wheel when you're not pushing it down. --DD Thank you! The horn only sounds when I make contact with the ground wire so it is working. I’m not seeing plastic spacers in this assembly and did some research on it. I also don’t see where others have plastic spacers unless I’m missing something. I’ll keep researching. May just have to break down and buy another steering wheel with a horn that works to pass inspection in the meantime then work on my old one. |
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