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Technical Testing of lights switch or dimmer switch??

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by olebetsy55, Jul 6, 2015.

  1. olebetsy55
    Joined: Jun 17, 2015
    Posts: 59

    olebetsy55
    Member

    I have a 1955 chevy 3200 second series and am having a bit of lighting problem.

    When pulling the knob to turn the headlamps on, it works great. No isssues when normal headlamps are on. When I push the dimmer switch on the floor to turn the high beams on, it may take several minutes up to 20 and then the headlights turn off completely. The lights inside the truck still are on no problems. As soon as I press the dimmer switch again the normal lamps turn back on and nothing is wrong. It seems that something shorts when the high beams are on.

    I have been told that possibly it is the headlight switch or the dimmer switch that is bad. Is there a way to test each to see which it truly is so I know which to replace??
     
  2. tb33anda3rd
    Joined: Oct 8, 2010
    Posts: 17,582

    tb33anda3rd
    Member

    i have taken those switches apart and cleaned the contacts. they are pretty simple, when you step down it rotates the terminals.
     
  3. HOTRODPRIMER
    Joined: Jan 3, 2003
    Posts: 64,710

    HOTRODPRIMER
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    I agree. HRP
     
  4. squirrel
    Joined: Sep 23, 2004
    Posts: 59,869

    squirrel
    Member

    I would replace the dimmer switch, and see how it does.
     
  5. saltflats
    Joined: Aug 14, 2007
    Posts: 13,542

    saltflats
    Member
    from Missouri

    If you have a test light or volt meter with the headlight switch on and the connector unpluged one wire will have voltage so then plug it in and you should have two wires with voltage then if you push the dimmer switch there should be a change it the voltage from one wire to the other ie low beam and high beam
    If you loose all voltage it has to be a problem with the light switch or the wiring from it to the dimmer switch if you still have voltage at the one wire then its a problem with the dimmer.
     
  6. olebetsy55
    Joined: Jun 17, 2015
    Posts: 59

    olebetsy55
    Member

    Thank you saltflats. I will test this tonight.
     
  7. Frank Carey
    Joined: Oct 15, 2009
    Posts: 579

    Frank Carey
    Member

    Not likely the headlight switch. I think '55 headlight switches have built in circuit breakers. When the high beam switch removes the low beams from the circuit and adds the hi-beams, it causes an overload (i.e., short) and trips the breaker in the headlight switch. This is why headlight go out and other lights stay on. So, something is wrong in the hi-beam circuit. It could be a faulty hi-beam switch as suggested or it could be a short in the wiring from the hi-beam switch to the headlights.
     
    Last edited: Jul 7, 2015

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