Yes. Try hooking the hrn directly to the battery. If it doesn't work the horn is bad.
check the horn relay or the horn itself!
It could be the horn relay, a defective fuse or a shorted wiring. Need to check the wiring first, then the fuse and lastly the horn relay.
It could be the relay or the fuse or the horn itself. Or, it could be all three!
could be either. or a fuse.
the horn relay switch is in the fuse panel or it should be on the horn wires itself
test at the plug in at the horn and see if you have fire if so then yes the horn is bad if not you have other problems, you can also just hook a positive cable and a negative cable to the horn were it plugs in and make it honk,then you no the horn is good .simple yet effective
The relay is mounted to the horn itself under front bumper
First thing to check is the fuse. If the fuse is good check the relay. If that is good check wiring. Can also be the horn switch or the horn itself.
It can be a bad ground, bad relay, bad connection, wire, steering wheel horn switch, fuse or even the horn itself could have failed. You'll have to track it down.
Check the fuse which is located in the box where the relay is. If that's ok, there's a good chance the horn is no good. If you push the horn on the steering wheel and you hear the relay clicking, it's definitely the horn OR a bad connection at the horn itself. The horn is located on the driver side of the car in front of the windshield washer resevoir, behind the bumper and can easily be accessed from underneath the car. Good Luck.
Start by checking the fuse panel for a blown horn fuse in the fusebox. If it is good, move on to the horn button and relay. The easy way to see if these are working properly, turn the key to "on." There is a horn relay, probably in the fuse box. Push the horn button and listen to the relay for a "clicking" sound. If there is a clicking sound when you push the button, these two should be ok. This should narrow the problem down to the horn itself. I have owned two dodge vehicles and have had to replace a horn on each of them and this was how I determined that it was the horn and not other circuitry.
If you can hear the relay click, it's not a fuse. It's either the circuit to the horn or the horn itself.