A short in the turn signal switch or the wire in the steering column is shorted.
There is more likely a short in one of the bulbs. easy to find remove bulbs until the bad one is found then replace
Short in the wiring.
I have a 1995 neon dodge and my dash lights will not come on or my tail lights and every time i change the airbag fuse and turn on the car the airbag fuse blows.
you die
Dead short either in wiring, sockets, or in steering column Remove bulbs and try turn signal switch if fuse still blows probable location in steering column
I would be suspicious of the bulbs you're using.
Usually a fuse. when the fuse blows the dash lights AND tail lights dont work. If your tail lights work and dash lights dont, check bulbs, if all blown at once you may have a shorting problem. If bulbs are good you may have a bad connection. Tracing wires is a big job. Get yourself a good quality test light.
Check wiring and sockets for dead short to ground at: Parking/Tail and dash lights Remove all bulbs and sockets -replace 1 at a time until fuse blows Investigate that socket Check wiring and sockets for dead short to ground at: Parking/Tail and dash lights Remove all bulbs and sockets -replace 1 at a time until fuse blows Investigate that socket
try to determine if it blows when you signal left or right. Once you find out which side the problem is on, there is either an exposed wire shorting out or there is corrosion at the turn signal harness for that particular side, front or rear.
i need your help on this one my own self
If parking lights and dash lights are not working and fuse blows out, there might be a problem with battery corrosion. Check the components specific to the circuits of the affected lights. It might be loose.
Check your wiring and see if there is a bare spot in it to cause a fuse to blow. Check ALL of the fuses as it depends on what circuit you got your voltage from. If the lights you added require more power than the circuit you tapped into can supply, the extra load blows the fuse.
The signal for the assembly in "Lord of the Flies" is blown by a conch shell, which is used as a symbol of authority and order among the boys on the island. Ralph, one of the main characters, blows the conch to call the boys together for meetings and discussions.