If all the fuses are good, then most likely the brake light switch right on the brake pedal inside the car. Check that.
Fuse 7 controls the brake lights. It should be a red 10amp fuse.
It is not necessarily the fuse. It could be the switch on the brake that is not closing the circuit.
After fuse (should be labeled) Try bulbs and defective stop light switch
After further research I am answering my own question. It is fuse number 6 on the fuse block located under the dash and is a 10 amp fuse.
Usually this tells you that 1 or more lights are burnt out.
generally the tail light fuse is the same fuse as the turn signals
I'm not exactly sure which fuse it is, but it doesn't sound like a fuse to me. I would check the switch on the pedal, just simply short acrost it from terminal to terminal with a screwdriver, if the brake lights come on, the switch on the pedal is bad, if they don't then it probably is a fuse.
Underhood Minifuses control the items in question. Fuses should be labeled, but if not you're on your own. BRAKE (Blue 15a) control brake lampls; HAZARD (Red 10a) controls Hazard Flasher, Inst Pnl, Turn Signals, Park/Turn lts and Rear Tail lts
Check the brake light switch on the brake pedal
Your switch in the steering column that controls the high beems and the turn signals is bad. I have had to change it on both 1987 bronco ii that I have owned. Not to difficult to do.
Under the center of the dash, in front of the console, mounted on the firewall. This one flasher controls the hazard lights and turn signals.
No, they do not have traditional turn signals but have flashing lights.