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Marker (Clearance) Light Issues

pcantin
Explorer
Explorer
Hi there.

I have a 1989 Ford class C. It is the Glendale Sterling series built on an E350 frame.

The last time I checked, all the lights on the vehicle worked (I just had it certified in the fall). After bringing it home from storage, the upper marker lights on the front and back are not working. The lower lights on the bumper work fine.

I checked all the fuses in the cab, but all were fine. Is there possibly another fuse box somewhere that holds a fuse for the upper lights?

It has the 460 gas engine in it in case that is important information.

Thanks for the help!
10 REPLIES 10

Hank85713
Explorer
Explorer
actually check the ground connection to the frame/engine to see if it is corroded. This will be easier than trying to go to each light. should be a grand strap that you can find, another way is to run as above to the ground at 1 light and see if the rest work. seeing you are in Canada with snow etc bet its the frame ground.

wittmeba
Explorer
Explorer
They are 12V lamps. So they must be wired in parallel.
NRA Member & supporter of the 2nd amendment - over 5,000,000 strong

Firefoxยฎ 33

Log home images - Updated 05/19/2013

pcantin
Explorer
Explorer
enblethen wrote:
No, the lights are not in series. They are in parallel.


I thought that to be the case, but after seeing how these things are put together, nothing would surprise me!!!

enblethen
Nomad
Nomad
No, the lights are not in series. They are in parallel.

Bud
USAF Retired
Pace Arrow


2003 Chev Ice Road Tracker

pcantin
Explorer
Explorer
Ozlander wrote:
Try a new light bulb.


Are the lights in series (one burn out means the whole circuit goes dead)?

I will take a look to see if all the wires are connected and go from there.

Thanks again for all the suggestions.

Ozlander
Explorer
Explorer
Try a new light bulb.
Ozlander

06 Yukon XL
2001 Trail-Lite 7253

enblethen
Nomad
Nomad
Skin being fiberglass makes it a little harder to locate.
Try running a jumper from ground to a fixture ground point. This will tell if it is a ground broken.
If the ground does not show being open, do the same thing by applying 12 volts DC to the center point of the lamp to see if lights come on.
Wiring could be run either up the rrear near one of the tailights, or in the front near where the chassis(cab) meets the coach. Could be corroded or broken wire.

Bud
USAF Retired
Pace Arrow


2003 Chev Ice Road Tracker

pcantin
Explorer
Explorer
Darn! A fuse would have been MUCH easier!!

The skin on my rig is fiberglass, but there is a metal framework. I will have to look a little deeper to see where it grounds.

Thanks for the (unfortunate) information. If anyone out there has the same rig, and they know where the lights ground, please let me know!

Peter

wittmeba
Explorer
Explorer
Sounds to me like a broken wire/bad connection before the first lamp in the string for the upper set. Not sure how to troubleshoot but start at the front lamp and check for good connections.
NRA Member & supporter of the 2nd amendment - over 5,000,000 strong

Firefoxยฎ 33

Log home images - Updated 05/19/2013

enblethen
Nomad
Nomad
Some have fuses in small panel behind the driver's seat.
I would guess that itis not a fuse but a bad ground. You could locate the main upper fixture where the ground attaches to the skin of the rig. Metal sheathed rigs use the skin as a ground path, each fixture has a mounting screw that connects the fixture to ground.
Try running a temporary wire from a good ground and touch the shell of one of the lamps in a fixture that is in-operative. If it lights then it is a ground problem.

Bud
USAF Retired
Pace Arrow


2003 Chev Ice Road Tracker