Somebody bought me the cluster assy from a 2010 Toyota SUV...
The hazzard lights would not turn off...you had to remove the fuse which kills the signal light function as well....
Toyota quoted him $1875.00 for the defective unit,(it was tested using an "Intelligent Tester"...whatever that is), plus the labour to install it....
When I took it apart, and started tracing the hazzard switch through the three circuit boards, I discovered that the switch only uses the three boards and interconnecting cables to connect it to the large connectors which reside in the dash wiring.....it did not connect to any active circuitry.....so how come the lights were always flashing??The switch was fine...
Anyway, I could not find anything shorted that would cause this....I gave it back to him and asked him to try it out...also suggested it could be his flasher as this controls the hazzard function as well......
He called me back and said "It Worked"...and he did not have to replace the flasher unit which by the way costs over a hundred bucks....he was back that night and paid me cash and thanked me for saving him a two thousand dollar repair bill....
The thing is...I had no way of doing dynamic tests on this....I had to use my DMM and what little bit of knowledge I have accumulated over the years...I guess I must know more than I actually think I do...one thing is for sure...no other technicians in town would touch it...
This is the main reason why I take practically anything to repair....I find that the more of a variety of equipment you look at, the more you learn...after all......a switch is a switch, a resistor is still a resistor.....the basic electronic components don't change.....it's the overall package....and if you take something and can't get it figured out,
no harm done and you still learned something....
Just my thoughts on it in general.....
Cheers,
Bernie
P.S. Hope I posted this in the right place!
The hazzard lights would not turn off...you had to remove the fuse which kills the signal light function as well....
Toyota quoted him $1875.00 for the defective unit,(it was tested using an "Intelligent Tester"...whatever that is), plus the labour to install it....
When I took it apart, and started tracing the hazzard switch through the three circuit boards, I discovered that the switch only uses the three boards and interconnecting cables to connect it to the large connectors which reside in the dash wiring.....it did not connect to any active circuitry.....so how come the lights were always flashing??The switch was fine...
Anyway, I could not find anything shorted that would cause this....I gave it back to him and asked him to try it out...also suggested it could be his flasher as this controls the hazzard function as well......
He called me back and said "It Worked"...and he did not have to replace the flasher unit which by the way costs over a hundred bucks....he was back that night and paid me cash and thanked me for saving him a two thousand dollar repair bill....
The thing is...I had no way of doing dynamic tests on this....I had to use my DMM and what little bit of knowledge I have accumulated over the years...I guess I must know more than I actually think I do...one thing is for sure...no other technicians in town would touch it...
This is the main reason why I take practically anything to repair....I find that the more of a variety of equipment you look at, the more you learn...after all......a switch is a switch, a resistor is still a resistor.....the basic electronic components don't change.....it's the overall package....and if you take something and can't get it figured out,
no harm done and you still learned something....
Just my thoughts on it in general.....
Cheers,
Bernie
P.S. Hope I posted this in the right place!
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