Under dash lamp short
Under dash lamp short
OK experts - need help - and let me start off by saying how much I hate electrical wiring in these old cars.
1970 Cutlass S - Courtesy Lights
All my interior lights work (dome, gauges, map, console, rear view mirror, ect...) except for the passenger side under dash light. Any time I put a new bulb in it, the fuse blows. I purchased a new receptacle for the passenger side thinking the receptacle is bad. Nope, even after replacing the receptacle it still does the same thing - blows the fuse. So logic tells me I have to painstakingly trace the short from the receptible back. At 6-2, 235lbs no small feet to lay under the dash.
Any quick ideas that I am missing? The whole harness works except for this socket.
Thanks.
1970 Cutlass S - Courtesy Lights
All my interior lights work (dome, gauges, map, console, rear view mirror, ect...) except for the passenger side under dash light. Any time I put a new bulb in it, the fuse blows. I purchased a new receptacle for the passenger side thinking the receptacle is bad. Nope, even after replacing the receptacle it still does the same thing - blows the fuse. So logic tells me I have to painstakingly trace the short from the receptible back. At 6-2, 235lbs no small feet to lay under the dash.
Any quick ideas that I am missing? The whole harness works except for this socket.
Thanks.
I moved your post to its own thread, there is no reason to resurrect an old unrelated one with your question. If the fuse does not blow without the lamp your wiring is good and it's related to the socket area.
once I actually stuck my head under to look I found out what the problem was. DUH!!

just go back to the basics when troubleshooting these type of issues.
one time 20 plus years ago I arrived at work to find the Day shift Engineer on a ladder digging in an Electrical circuit box on the Boiler room ceiling
He had every cover of every 1900 box off, I asked him what he was doing, He said the Boiler room doorbell isn't working. I asked him if he checked the Doorbell and he said "no, I started tracing out the circuit and haven't gotten that far yet" I grabbed a screwdriver and removed the Doorbell button and found the spring inside had popped off and was preventing the contacts from making.
I reset it put the button back up and tested it. after 5 minutes of work I fixed it. the more experienced Engineer had spent the better part his shift trying to figure it out.
I told him "I guess you started at the wrong end"
Last edited by Schne442; Mar 23, 2021 at 08:11 AM.
OK my friends I need help again. After putting the socket back into under the dash mounting panel the two leads in the sockets (no bulb, had to order one) touched and sparked and now I have NO electrical. The courtesy light fuse blew but in the past the car would still start and work fine without this fuse. I tried jumping it and I would only receive enough juice to hear the key buzzer - nothing else worked. No headlights, starter won't crank, no gauge warnings during the start mode.
Did the battery blow or did I fry another fuse outside of the fuse box? I should of stayed with the "if it ain't broken don't fix it..."
Did the battery blow or did I fry another fuse outside of the fuse box? I should of stayed with the "if it ain't broken don't fix it..."
1) do you have the factory shop book with the color wiring diagrams? If not, get it.
2) I think it would be unusual, but you have possibly burned out a fuse link. Look at the junction block on the fenderwell.
3) always a good idea to either disconnect battery or remove the courtesy lamp fuse when fooling with constant 12v powered components.
2) I think it would be unusual, but you have possibly burned out a fuse link. Look at the junction block on the fenderwell.
3) always a good idea to either disconnect battery or remove the courtesy lamp fuse when fooling with constant 12v powered components.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post



