Sounds like you've got a burnt-out taillight bulb.
If it works, voila! If it doesn't, you've got electrical issues...or bought a burnt out bulb. To test the bulb, you can slip it into the working tail-light housing on the other side and test it...
There are several things you need to know before you start like is it a 4 wire 6 wire or 7 wire plug. But most of the time with any of the tails or turns or marker lights it is a ground issue. Most trailer tail light are a 3 wire configuration because they are also the turn signal and brake lights. Most manufacturers use the WHITE wire as ground, some use black so be careful, if not you may blow a fuse in your tow vehicle. First take the tail light out of its assembley and trace the ground wire back, some trailers the ground is attached on the rear frame, and make sure that it is screwed down tight(the grd wire). If it is a 4 wire make sure you don't have excess rust on the hitch ball on your tow vehicle, as that is used as a chassis ground. If all else fails find a trailer dealer that also services what they sell and they can probaly fix you up in a half an hour or less.
Ducktape
If the vehicle is under 10 years old you can purchase a new one from the dealer. If the vehicle is over 10 years old you can call your local wrecking yards for a good used one for aprox half the price of a new one.
put it on a trailer and hook up the trailer to a car with a hitch, and pull wherever you want to.
Open the passenger door and pull the cup holder cover and its behind that.
It is in the intake behind the throtle body. Simply pull it out and replace it.
If you reach behind the light you can twist and pull removing the light bulb socket. Pull out the light and install a new one and do the reverse to install.
You have to take the door panel off by a few screws in the trim lift the panel up and pull out and it is a black cylinder
16
and what?
You'll need a truck that's heavy enough to pull the trailer, equipped with a trailer ball hitch to attach the trailer. You also need to make sure the horse trailer has operating turn signal and brake lights.
It is called a trailer if you pull it behind your car.
Type your answer here... 18
Yes you can. You can pull doubles and triples. You can pull two 48 trailers and two 53 foot trailers. You can pull three 48s, but you cannot pull three 53 foot trailers.
Absolutely! Buy a BrenderUp. I have a BrenderUp horse trailer and pull it with my small 98 ford Explorer w/out a tour package. Hardly know the trailer is behind me.
Most people have after market trailer hitches installed on their vehicles that are rated to pull things behind them.
If you mean hooking a small trailer behind a bigger trailer behind your truck, no. You can only triple-tow in certain states and provinces and only if the first trailer is a fifth wheel.
shove boards under the front of each trailer tire. as you pull the trailer will ride up on the boards and you can pull it out. if the tires are sunk in dig out some of the mud in front of the tires then get the boards in there.
I can't pull a trailer because I do not have a trailer hitch on the back of my car.
Yes. If you are referring to a "tow behind" or a light weight trailer model.