A bad earth on a car lamp can lead to erratic lighting behavior, such as flickering or dimming of the lamp. It may also cause the lamp to fail completely or create a poor connection that disrupts the electrical circuit. Additionally, it can lead to increased resistance, potentially causing overheating and damage to the lamp or wiring. Overall, a faulty earth can compromise the safety and functionality of the vehicle's lighting system.
- Damaged or burnt wiring - Bad or corroded earth connection in the brake lamp cluster - Failed bulbs. (although it's unlikely that all your brake lights have blown) You can use a meter and a volunteer to check that power is reaching the bulb holder. If power is reaching the bulbs and they are working, then a bad earth connection may be the cause. Corrosion around the lamp cluster is a common cause of this. There may be problems with the other lights if the vehicle has a shared lamp cluster At any rate, it wouldn't do any harm to let a vehicle electrician take a look
High levels of ozone are good. They will not cause any bad.
The earth would probably get hurt really bad cause it'll hurt people,animals,and plants
Typically, a bad ballast will affect both lamps in a two-lamp fluorescent fixture. However, it is possible for only one lamp to be affected if the ballast failure is isolated to one side of the ballast that powers a single lamp.
No.
bad
No. A bad starter would cause the car not to start.
Yes, a bad O2 sensor would cause a 2002 Dodge Dakota to stall. It would also cause bad fuel mileage and hard idling within the vehicle.
Bad coil Bad rotor
No, a bad fuel pump will cause a no run situation.
A bad thing about a car/cars is they cause pollution and that's bad for the earth. Another thing is it costs a lot of money. =/
A bad alternator will cause a battery to go bad. It does not have an effect on the air conditioner.