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Brake lights


SeKcGamer

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I pulled my car into the auto body shop in school because I notice one taillight was dimmer than the other. I fixed the dim issue. But I asked my friend to see if my brake lights worked and he said they didnt. Also I was really low on brake fluid because my dad was removing the calipers to see why there was a lot of squeaking. I bought some today and poured it in. Do you guys think it's the brake switch?

 

 

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The switch at the brake pedal is a simple on-off switch, actuated by the pedal positon.  It should have power to the connector at all times.  That would be the simplest place to start I think.  If there's no power there then you'll know which side to work on to narrow things down.  Crawl up under the dash with a meter and see what you find.

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The switch at the brake pedal is a simple on-off switch, actuated by the pedal positon.  It should have power to the connector at all times.  That would be the simplest place to start I think.  If there's no power there then you'll know which side to work on to narrow things down.  Crawl up under the dash with a meter and see what you find.

The voltimeter read 3.56 at the switch

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There are two sides - one to the lights and their ground point, and the other from the power source,  You only reported one number.

Break out that circuit testing knowledge.  This is a very simple one, power on one side and device on the other.  It's just a switch, a break in the circuit.  Button in, circuit made, button out, circuit broken.

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Those are good things to check that ZH mentioned.  

Also, when it the last time you checked the bulbs in the sockets?  If you've never checked before, that is a common connection problem due to rust and crud built up over time on cars that have sat for a long time.  It happens to the running/parking lights also.  Probably a good time to check them all.  Deoxit is the cleaner that some of the electrical guys around here like to recommend.

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Those are good things to check that ZH mentioned.  
Also, when it the last time you checked the bulbs in the sockets?  If you've never checked before, that is a common connection problem due to rust and crud built up over time on cars that have sat for a long time.  It happens to the running/parking lights also.  Probably a good time to check them all.  Deoxit is the cleaner that some of the electrical guys around here like to recommend.

IMG_3073.JPG
This was the one that's dim.. .could this be shorting it out. do you think a socket from a 260z should work?. Sorry for the late response, I had work.



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