Turn signal switch, taillight not lighting up, no dash lights and more!

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If someone takes the time to try to help another person, their efforts should be applauded.
I always appreciate the effort even if it does not bear fruit.
 
A lot of A body stuff carries over. I don’t know the details on the early A body cars but a lot of the 68-72 stuff is similar, 73-75 too.
1967 was a weird year with early and late stuff. 1976 had some one year only stuff related to emission controls.
I think I got this figured though.
1972 did have a few small unique things. The plastic housings used the external ground with a tab on the outer edges of the bulb socket.

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This is the only year that I have seen that has this two wire terminal to a blue colored collar. Sort of weird.

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Looking close, there is a tab to index the collar in the socket to get the bulb to make contact with the “contacts”.

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If that collar is out of position, the bulb’s contacts won’t touch, no light. There are three indentations, two are for the pins on the side of the bulb housing, one is to index the collar.

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I did have power to the wires.

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The inside of the socket was cleaned with a Scotch Brite, the collar was put in properly and….

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Now onto dealing with the dead gauge lights.
That is usually the headlight switch, right ?
Well done Greg. Way to figure it out.
 
my 50 year old headlight switch crapped out on me this year as well, went with the Standard Motor Product part (DS357 for my '76, looks like DS165 for a '72) not their T-series, the more expensive one. everything has worked flawlessly since.
 
The 1 piece headlight switch required Knob turned all the way left to turn on dome light and just off that detent was the dash lighting brightness.. Try moving the knob left and right with the headlights on to see if they illuminate.
 
Thank you. I have tried that with each one, none of them made a difference.
Sometimes when the symptoms don't change despite replacing a part with another part, the problem lies elsewhere.
 

I've heard some stories about aftermarket ignition and turn signal switched for classic cars.
I'm working on my 72 Duster. I put a 69 Valiant grille in it years ago but just recently got the headlights and parking lamps working after swapping in a new switch.

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I tested a couple of used ones, each had something wrong with them.
With the reproduction switch in place, the left taillight socket gets no power for the running light. Is this a common thing?
Check your grounds to the grill. Had a side marker out once and found out there was a bad ground at the front turn signal (loose screw).
 
I did find the wire diagram. The last fuse on the end is for the instrument lamps.

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With or without a fuse, I was getting nothing. The terminals have scale rust.

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The switch connector has this pattern.

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The pen points to the terminal that sends power to the fuse.

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Lower right corner, angled slightly.

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With the first click, it lights up. Power should be going to the fuse box but it isn’t consistent. The input side of the fuse should be hot when the test light is on but it hasn’t been. The top terminal with orange wires is the instrument feed.

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Ideally, id unplug the fuse panel and dunk it in CLR or Evaporust but instead, I pulled a few terminals out to soak on the table.

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This should eat up the corrosion. If it didn’t fix this, at least I may have stopped a future failure by eliminating corrosion that would likely pose some problem later.
 
The fuse in this terminal looked fine:

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I bridged over the terminals on the back side and pulled the switch....

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....Still no dash lights so the problem is a bit deeper. I'm wondering if I did something as stupid as put in the bulb sockets with dead bulbs in them!
At least with the fuse panel terminals cleaned up that should be one less weak point.
 
The fuse in this terminal looked fine:

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I bridged over the terminals on the back side and pulled the switch....

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....Still no dash lights so the problem is a bit deeper. I'm wondering if I did something as stupid as put in the bulb sockets with dead bulbs in them!
At least with the fuse panel terminals cleaned up that should be one less weak point.
If the test light shows no power at the fuse box than the bulbs aren't the current problem...
You have power at the switch, did you get power at the fuse box on than terminal?
If not you might want to replace that wire, but first I would try pinpointing a possible break in the wire
 
The wire from the headlight switch to the fuse panel is tan, 18 gauge. I get inconsistent readings at each end of it but the end at the switch lights up most of the time while the fuse end is not as consistent.
It does make sense to replace the wire in case there are strands broken off behind the insulation. Even when both ends light up and I "jumper" the fuse, the other side does technically get power but the dash is still dark.
I worry a bit about the fragile pins on the back of the instrument cluster, I think that is where power to the gauge lighting comes in. I have spare panels in the attic if I need to replace this one.
 
Unplug the headlight switch, jumper from the battery power connection to the tan wire, that way you eliminate the switch as a variable.. Now probe the brown wire at the fuse box...

Or as another option, on the fuse box jumper power from one of the 12v points to the inst lamp circuit, do the dash lights light? if so you know all that stuff from the fuse to the bulbs is good...

isolate sections & pinpoint the issue
 
I have tried bridging from other terminals that have power to the "orange wires" on the fuse terminal and still get no dash lights.
From what I have encountered, the insulation on wires associated to lights in the dash panel is orange. That does help with following the leads.
The instrument panel is not original but it fits and matches the 73-74 model years. I put this in maybe 15 years ago? I don't remember exactly.
It is dreary and unpleasant outside so I'm struggling to muster up motivation to get out there to do things!
This car sat for years in a grassy field with at least one window partially down. Surface rust was on a lot of things.
 
I have tried bridging from other terminals that have power to the "orange wires" on the fuse terminal and still get no dash lights.
From what I have encountered, the insulation on wires associated to lights in the dash panel is orange. That does help with following the leads.
The instrument panel is not original but it fits and matches the 73-74 model years. I put this in maybe 15 years ago? I don't remember exactly.
It is dreary and unpleasant outside so I'm struggling to muster up motivation to get out there to do things!
This car sat for years in a grassy field with at least one window partially down. Surface rust was on a lot of things.
Yet, the weather has been crappy, if you want to drop it till things warm up I'd certainly understand... Maybe next year.... LOL..
But yeah, it's sounding like more than one issue & those pins are always suspect... On the bulbs, usually if they are bad they get dark like soot deposits inside the bulb
 
The CLR did eliminate some of the corrosion but I seem to recall having better results with Evaporust.

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I’m going to dunk these in the Evaporust and let them soak a day.
 
A humble moment will come for all of us.

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I pulled the cluster. I think I want to replace this cover. It is scuffed up, it is chipped at the lower right corner too. The instruments look great. Turning it over…

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MOST of the instrument light bulbs are missing. I think I know what I was thinking when I put this cluster in place…. I figured I’d be going through the dash when I restore the interior so I didn’t do a complete job to it. In the stash, I had some sockets and bulbs and tested them…..

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Sadly, at least half of the bulbs in the box were dead. They looked fine but did not light up. I made sure to test each before installing them back.
I have another IP piece to use, it is blank between the light switch and speedometer like the early cars were. I have no idea of what is OEM correct.
I can take time to restore this but…. Is there anyone reproducing these in OEM fashion? I’ve seen custom ones but I’d like to keep a stock type look here.

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Tarn-x works well.... five minutes in Tarn-x & your done

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I’ll need to get some of that.

Maybe hit the contacts with a thin sanding cartridge. Or maybe wrap some sandpaper/red scotchbrite around a screw and give it a spin?

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Hmmmm….

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Holy crap, it worked!

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That is impressive. When I use the Evaporust, the finish usually needs no scuffing to clear off anything. The CLR liquid did not change color overnight so I thought maybe it didn’t do much.
80 grit sandpaper took care of this.
Thanks!
 
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Man…. We get used to new cars with brighter bulbs, clean lenses with no scratches or fogging and an old car lighting looks so dim!
Cleaning the fuse terminals helped along with grounding the panel. The screws that mount it to the dash frame press against the steel panel housing. When grounded, it lit up. The battery is low here, 12.19V so it may get brighter with a fully charged battery and the car running.
Score!
 
I had someone ask about polishing the gauge lens recently... I suggested Mothers... He thought that would be to harsh, I told him to try it anyway...

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It seemed to work...

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The little mini buffer seemed to really help...
 
I do have some plastic polish here I'll try but I am open to other options if this stuff isn't good enough.
 
had issues with my '76. this spring. My original turn signal switch had the latch that holds it on when turning right break off, so I replaced just the cam with a Dorman part (Dorman 49301), and started having issues with my taillights. after spending a day tracing wires/grounds, it was the replacement cam. Bit the bullet and bought a Standard Motor Products TW7 (the whole switch) and it's been working fine since.
Thanks for the heads up. My two grandkids just busted my turn signal switch in the '72 Satellite Sebring Plus using it as a gearshift.
 
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