open up the plastic and place the light bulb in simple really
Lights are required on every trailer
You do not have the trailer lights connected properly.
form_title= Trailer Lights form_header= Install trailer lights with help from pros. Do you have a commercial trailer?*= () Yes () No What color lights do you want to install?*= _ [50] How many lights do you want to install?*= {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, More than 5}
The brake lights on a 1998 Mercury Sable are changed by removing the retaining screws, pulling the light assembly away from the vehicle, and removing the bulb. A new bulb can then be installed and the assembly put back in place.
Lights are required on a boat trailer to proven those from behind running into your boat trailer. This is especially important at dark where it is difficult to see an unlit trailer.
It does have both tail lights as well as dash lights
There are no extra fuses for your trailer lights. If you have the towing package (and you do) the trailer lights run through your regular fuses (tail, brake, turn).
Two lights from the front two at the back. i wish i could change that but there you go
There are separate fuses for trailer signal lights in main fuse panel
It is for the trailer running lights.
It's a green light that should flash once every time you put your signal light on (either direction). This light tells you that the trailer wiring system that was built into the Disco is working properly. When you tow a trailer and connect the trailer lights to the LR wiring connection next to the hitch, the green "trailer" light on the dash should flash in sync with the signal light arrows every time you put on your signal light. This is telling you that your trailer lights are working properly. If the green "trailer" dash light does not flash, then you might have something wrong with the trailer lights or with the wiring. Unfortunatly Land Rover abandoned this feature on the Disco II.
yes it does
check for power at the trailer connector.
Lights
Check your fuses and look for a dead-short on the tail light wire (probably brown).
Hitch the trailer. Connect the lights. Start your car or truck. Turn the turn signal on. Get out and go behind the trailer. See if they blink. Repeat for the other side.
Start with the headlamp switch.
Tail lights and brake lights fuse.
You have a poor or no ground between the vehicle and trailer.
there may be a short get longer wires
I would check the running lights for one with a short. I had the same sort of thing with my trailer and I spent way to much time troubleshooting the brake and signal wires. Turns out a running light bulb connector was grounding out on the trailer and messing it all up.
Lights are always required to be installed on a boat trailer. This is so no one runs into the back of the trailer, especially at night.
Yes. You need a converter to combine the turn signals with the brake lights.
Check for a bad ground
short circuit on trailer light wiring