TomHanx
Member
- Thread starter
- #16
The one I couldn't get appart was under the drivers' seat, on the frame rail. The tail lights look sealed, no signs of water. The connectors on them are both clean. There's a couple others under the rear end that I pulled apart, all looked good.Have you checked the wiring harness connectors that feed the lights by pulling the connectors apart and checking for corrosion or damaged connections? Follow the wiring harness from the taillights towards the front of the truck. Pull each connector and examine carefully for issues. You mentioned that you couldn't get the one connector apart. That one may have corrosion in it as others have had water enter that connector and cause corrosion. Look in the taillight connectors for evidence of water entry and corrosion. I would still check the grounds with an ohmmeter as an open ground could cause current back-feeding between the lighting circuits that share a common ground.
I'm intrigued by airline tech's post yesterday, where he mentioned seeing the pulse from the park assist sensors, in the tail lights. I'm wondering if that is what's causing the strobe effect that is only visible until I shift out of park. Once I shift past reverse, the park aid warning pops up on screen, I assume that turns the sensors off, at which point the strobe effect in the taillights also stops. (still flashing on the right side though, when using left signal. Were you able to see the video I uploaded? It's not showing up for me. So where's the commonality between turn signals, rear park lights, and rear park sensors? Sure looks like connector C422.....the one I couldn't get apart of course! It looks clean, it just felt like the plastic tab was gonna break off, so called it a night, and haven't had the chance to try again yet. Thursday I'm hoping.
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