Open the rear doors. Between the body and door opening you will see two Phillips screws holding the tail light lens assembly.
Remove two screws and remove assy fromn body -
Twist light socket from assy. (a detent pin may be present - press lever and twist) -
Push bulb in slightly & twist and then pull light bulb out of socket (newer models may have straight pull bulb?)-
Replace bulb, check for function and reassemble-
Best of luck!
don't no how
There is no inertia switch on the GM Safari.
Go to your GMC dealer they can get one
where is the neutral safety switch on gm safari
Usually. Most GM vehicles put the instrument cluster and the tail lights on the same fuse so that if the tail light fuse blows you'll know something is wrong and hopefully get it repaired. The headlight switch uses the same fuse circuit to run both the tail lights and the dash lights. If the fuse is ok, check the headlight switch.
Try removing the tailight fixtures from the rear of the truck (GM had some problems with these) Replace fuse and see if it blows again. If so problem may be a dead short in the dash panel or in the switch itself. If it doesn't blow check and/or replace rear tailight fixtures
its in the gas tank so you will have to drop gas tank
The GM Safari was produced from the years 1985 to 2005. The vacuum switches for the AC vents on a 1995 GM Safari all-wheel-drive van are located underneath the dashboard.
no only hermapherdites drive GmC sAfArI'S
Maybe a fuse or relay burned out sounds like a bad multifunction switch, very common issue with older gm's in the 90s. Believe it or not gm wired the brake lights to be powered off the multi-function switch assembly in the steering column
2005 was last year
A blown fuse. Or a connection problem within the instrument cluster