Good day, fellow Overlanders.
Hoping there are some senior Land Rover enthusiasts around to help me out.
I've run into an issue that has me perplexed, and I believe I may have it narrowed down.
Today, I found that I couldn't shift out of park (I drive a 2003 Discovery II), and thought to myself "shit, my brake switch is at it again".
I check Fuse-25 in the drivers fuse box and low and behold it has blown (15a).
I replace it, and then inspect my brake switch, to ensure that I don't need to reset it. It looks fine, so, I try shifting again. I'm able to shift and head off to work.
I found out later that my brake lights are out the entire drive. Well, my running lights for the LH light housing work, as do all my signal indicators, it's just the RH running light that doesn't, and then both brake lights don't activate.
I've spent a little bit here at the hangar trying to trouble shoot.
Fuse-25 blows constantly.
Fuses 11, 14, 29, and 33 are intact.
Inspected RH lights, none are blown.
The brake light isn't receiving power (I left the blown fuse sit unchanged, i expected this)
Changed the brake light out with a new 1157 bulb, and in noticing a bad fit for the turn signal light, I change that too. I then turn on the RH signal indicator for the hell of it. It signals just fine, but is now flashing my tow light... Weird.
I figure the 1157 might be too much for it and change it back to its original, no issues.
I checked for voltage in the driver side fuse box with Fuse-25 out, receiving 12V+, good.
With the brake switch disconnected, I check the Green and Orange wire that sits on its 3rd pin, straight from Fuse-25, 12V+, good.
Reinstall brake switch with new fuse, it blows the fuse....
Since I had the brake switch disconnected, it would believe the brakes are applied and try to signal the lights.
Knowing that the switch, fuse box, are acting correctly, is it safe to assume that I've got a bad wire somewhere in the rear of the vehicle?
Grounds appear okay, and I've yet to track down the trailer harness to give it s good look over.
At a loss otherwise, and it has me legally/morally stranded at the squadrons hangar, ha.
If anyone has some insight, I'd be most appreciative. Last thing I need to do is keep feeding it fuses, I'll burn out my harnesses.
Thanks in advance!
-Ryan
Sent from my iPhone using Overland Bound Talk
Hoping there are some senior Land Rover enthusiasts around to help me out.
I've run into an issue that has me perplexed, and I believe I may have it narrowed down.
Today, I found that I couldn't shift out of park (I drive a 2003 Discovery II), and thought to myself "shit, my brake switch is at it again".
I check Fuse-25 in the drivers fuse box and low and behold it has blown (15a).
I replace it, and then inspect my brake switch, to ensure that I don't need to reset it. It looks fine, so, I try shifting again. I'm able to shift and head off to work.
I found out later that my brake lights are out the entire drive. Well, my running lights for the LH light housing work, as do all my signal indicators, it's just the RH running light that doesn't, and then both brake lights don't activate.
I've spent a little bit here at the hangar trying to trouble shoot.
Fuse-25 blows constantly.
Fuses 11, 14, 29, and 33 are intact.
Inspected RH lights, none are blown.
The brake light isn't receiving power (I left the blown fuse sit unchanged, i expected this)
Changed the brake light out with a new 1157 bulb, and in noticing a bad fit for the turn signal light, I change that too. I then turn on the RH signal indicator for the hell of it. It signals just fine, but is now flashing my tow light... Weird.
I figure the 1157 might be too much for it and change it back to its original, no issues.
I checked for voltage in the driver side fuse box with Fuse-25 out, receiving 12V+, good.
With the brake switch disconnected, I check the Green and Orange wire that sits on its 3rd pin, straight from Fuse-25, 12V+, good.
Reinstall brake switch with new fuse, it blows the fuse....
Since I had the brake switch disconnected, it would believe the brakes are applied and try to signal the lights.
Knowing that the switch, fuse box, are acting correctly, is it safe to assume that I've got a bad wire somewhere in the rear of the vehicle?
Grounds appear okay, and I've yet to track down the trailer harness to give it s good look over.
At a loss otherwise, and it has me legally/morally stranded at the squadrons hangar, ha.
If anyone has some insight, I'd be most appreciative. Last thing I need to do is keep feeding it fuses, I'll burn out my harnesses.
Thanks in advance!
-Ryan
Sent from my iPhone using Overland Bound Talk