you will probably have to replace the headlight switch.
No. The headlights on a 1994 are individual and bought as an entire assembly. 1998 had a slight body restyling with the bubble headlights, requiring only bulbs to be changed instead of the entire unit.
No. The 1998 to 2002 hoods are sculptured in the front to fit the restyled headlights.
No, the 98 Camaro is when Chevy started switching things up, they headlights aren't the in cased bulbs for headlights they are now a 9000 type bulb such as a 9005 I believe is what 98 Camaro's take for headlights. The only way I could think it was possible is if you replaced the headlights, hood, fenders, bumper, and I'm not sure then if it would still work. Those two years are the two different 4th generation Camaro's made.
Gm does not use inertia switches.
yes, ive thought about it on mine as well, you just have to have the conversion kit
To find the cause of the low beams not working, start with the bulb to make sure both are ok. Check the dimmer switch, and the wiring from the switch to the headlights.
bad switch or possibly stuck switch
The switch that turns the headlights on. PULL it back once for front fogs(if fitted) and twice for rear fogs. This will only work with the headlights on though(sidelights or dipped) OK
first check your fuses then test the switch in different positions with a volt meter.
Bad bulb? Blown fuse? Bad signal flasher? Bad switch?
A 1998 Chevy Camaro uses R134a.
The wipers on my 1998 Honda Civic were stuck on low so I assumed it was the switch and replaced it, but the problem continued. The local Honda dealer told me that I should replace the motor, which I did, and the problem was fixed.