Blinkers do not like the cold. Wrong blinker fluid?
#1
Blinkers do not like the cold. Wrong blinker fluid?
Joking aside, on cold days my blinkers do not like to blink. Before I go ordering a new relay, anyone else have this? I'm not quite sure if it is a relay or something else. I have never had a relay be slow because of cold before honestly. It is 100% normal when warm, or after the truck warms up a bit, but when cold you hit the turn signal and you get a solid delay of maybe 2-5 seconds (or long enough to already have completed your turn pretty much). Being it is the only thing that is slow to respond, it has me thinking maybe it is an issue in the stalk and not a relay, but wanted to see if anyone had an experience like this.
#2
You need to get some 0W blinker fluid, you've probably got some 40W in there now and its just too cold, cant blink fast enough... lol
Relays usually either work or they dont, id have to go with the stalk. I had a similar problem with a previous car that did the same thing.. and was the stalk..
Relays usually either work or they dont, id have to go with the stalk. I had a similar problem with a previous car that did the same thing.. and was the stalk..
#3
If lovely assistant or a mirror can assist and see if light come on steady but don't blink, might be corrosion of the base around the bulbs, it can make odd resistance when temp changes. A higher resistance would mean less current, and at some point the blinker believes that one of the bulbs is burned out, so it would just stay on steady. The stalk is also suspect as it warms up with the inside of the car. Could test with lovely assistant's hair dryer on low....
BTW, hows that coolant sensor?
BTW, hows that coolant sensor?
#4
If lovely assistant or a mirror can assist and see if light come on steady but don't blink, might be corrosion of the base around the bulbs, it can make odd resistance when temp changes. A higher resistance would mean less current, and at some point the blinker believes that one of the bulbs is burned out, so it would just stay on steady. The stalk is also suspect as it warms up with the inside of the car. Could test with lovely assistant's hair dryer on low....
BTW, hows that coolant sensor?
BTW, hows that coolant sensor?
As far as the sensor, the local places did not have in stock but could have today. I might just order it online. I did take off and clean out the plug though, but it looked totally fine. I'm going to order a new t-stat too. What the heck, might as well try. The temp on the UG reads pretty darn spot on when cold, so I'm still doubting that but will do the new (and tested) t-stat. Even though the old one was flowing, I'm wondering if maybe it is just opening at too high a temp or maybe it is requiring too much pressure.
#6
Being that this problem affects both bulbs it's likely not your issue, but what I''ve had happen to me a couple times with my DI and DII is that the rubber sealant/sorround on the top of the housing deteriorates and the housing will eventually fill with water when it rains, corroding the contacts on the bulbs. Just went to the junkyard and grabbed new connections, and used some glue and e-tape to seal the top of the housing back up.
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