Postby Cobber » 11 Aug 2024 02:29
Yeah the indicator switches in these things are rubbish, unable to handle the current running through them, I had one shit itself and when I replaced it with a brand new one, that only lasted a few minutes before that too shat itself, when I fitted the replacement of the replacement. I came up with a way of wiring relays into the system to protect the flimsy electrical contacts of the indicator switch, from the current loads involved, some 20 years later my indicators have worked well without any further problems......sorted!
I can't remember how I achieved this after all these years, so you're on your own if you'd like to emulate this, even my auto electrician mate had a problem getting his head around how I did this, but he eventually made sense of my complicated reasoning and agreed that it was an improvement.
At least now you now know it is possible.
"Keep calm, relax, take a deep breath, focus on the problem & PULL THE BLOODY TRIGGER"
'80 Triumph TR7.
'97 Ford Falcon Longreach 'S' ute,
'98 MG-F.
'83 Jaguar XJ6 Sovereign S3.