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1995 Saturn SL1 Turn Signal / Hazard Flasher Car: 1995 Saturn SL1 SOHC. Symptom: Left Turn Signal flashes/clicks at double frequency, back Left turn lamp not lighting, front Left turn lamp lighting/flashing at double frequency. When first noticed, trouble happened intermittently. My troubleshooting: Left turn bulb (#2056) is fine, will light on Right side when exchanged. Continuity on Left socket is fine (0 Ohms). I suspect the Turn Signal / Hazard Flasher unit. Is this just a case of replacing the Turn Signal / Hazard Flasher Unit, or in people’s experience do you suggest I also consider something else? |
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In article <gan3to$hts$1 (AT) news (DOT) ryerson.ca>, Roger E <rogerehrl (AT) yahoo (DOT) ca> wrote: 1995 Saturn SL1 Turn Signal / Hazard Flasher Car: 1995 Saturn SL1 SOHC. Symptom: Left Turn Signal flashes/clicks at double frequency, back Left turn lamp not lighting, front Left turn lamp lighting/flashing at double frequency. When first noticed, trouble happened intermittently. My troubleshooting: Left turn bulb (#2056) is fine, will light on Right side when exchanged. Continuity on Left socket is fine (0 Ohms). I suspect the Turn Signal / Hazard Flasher unit. Is this just a case of replacing the Turn Signal / Hazard Flasher Unit, or in people’s experience do you suggest I also consider something else? No. If the problem were the flasher unit, you'd see the trouble on both sides, not just the left. Trouble on only one side means a problem on only one side. I think most likely, you have a bad connection going to the left rear socket; first thing to check is to verify that you have 12V on the correct pin in that socket -- I'll bet you don't. If you have 0V, look for a broken wire; if somewhere between 0V and 12V, open all connector blocks in the circuit and inspect for dirt and/or corrosion. If that tests good, verify that the left rear socket is properly grounded; repair as needed. If that still doesn't uncover the problem, pull the left *front* turn signal bulb and inspect it: sometimes, when one filament in a dual-filament bulb fails, the grounded end of the broken filament falls somewhere in the middle of the good filament -- and produces *peculiar* symptoms in the rest of the circuit. Hi Folks |
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