- Joined
- Dec 7, 2022
- Messages
- 5
- Reaction score
- 2
- Points
- 3
- Vehicle Year
- 1988
- Vehicle
- Bronco II
- Suspension Style
- 4wd
Hi, y'all!
Apologies if there's already a thread about this... which I'm sure there is. Need a little help.
Back in maybe January I took my 1988 Bronco II to the shop because the headlights, tail lights, and instrument cluster lights went out. I knew there was a blown fuse, because they are all connected, and replaced the fuse once, but wanted to actually fix the problem. (Of course...) The headlight switch connector was melted, and they replaced the connector and the switch itself. This ran fine for a while, then I had to replace a fuse again. After that, no problems with the headlights until last week. Went to drive home in the dark, boom no headlights! Thankfully was just down the road from my house. I checked to see if it was the fuse again. Still have tail lights and instrument cluster lights. Didn't catch a blown fuse. So, is it possible that the connector already melted again? I suppose I can go look, and know pretty quickly, just haven't had the time and I'm curious if this is normal that the problem could happen that quickly within a year of completely replacing the part. If so, I don't really feel safe just swapping it out with the same OEM part, only for it to melt again when I'm maybe further away from my house at night. Is there a mod I can do? A different switch I can swap it with that still fits? I'm not extremely proficient in auto work (I can swap a fuse, replace a battery, check fluid levels, etc. but nothing advanced). Any help much appreciated!
Apologies if there's already a thread about this... which I'm sure there is. Need a little help.
Back in maybe January I took my 1988 Bronco II to the shop because the headlights, tail lights, and instrument cluster lights went out. I knew there was a blown fuse, because they are all connected, and replaced the fuse once, but wanted to actually fix the problem. (Of course...) The headlight switch connector was melted, and they replaced the connector and the switch itself. This ran fine for a while, then I had to replace a fuse again. After that, no problems with the headlights until last week. Went to drive home in the dark, boom no headlights! Thankfully was just down the road from my house. I checked to see if it was the fuse again. Still have tail lights and instrument cluster lights. Didn't catch a blown fuse. So, is it possible that the connector already melted again? I suppose I can go look, and know pretty quickly, just haven't had the time and I'm curious if this is normal that the problem could happen that quickly within a year of completely replacing the part. If so, I don't really feel safe just swapping it out with the same OEM part, only for it to melt again when I'm maybe further away from my house at night. Is there a mod I can do? A different switch I can swap it with that still fits? I'm not extremely proficient in auto work (I can swap a fuse, replace a battery, check fluid levels, etc. but nothing advanced). Any help much appreciated!