I was inspired recently to get the tail lights working on the '74 spider. I had drivers side brake light, but the bulb was bad on the passenger side. Cleaned the receptacle, replaced bulb and bing I had both brake lights. Great start.
#5 fuse would blow as soon as I turn the stalk to first position. I replaced all the gauge lights and for a short (pun intended) time had everything working with the exception of side markers. Lights went out when putting nuts back on the passenger tail light. Jiggle with finger a wire behind the housing and all is on again, no fuse blown. Went for a drive and hit the wipers (on a different fuse) to clear dew and all is dark again and the fuse is blown.
Pull light out again, replace all the female connectors on the ground wire series, clean more terminals and the ground on the passenger tail light and everything works again until I put the light assembly back in the car with all the bolts. Blow the same fuse a few more times trying to track down a source of the short at the passenger tail light assembly. I swapped out a whole tail light assembly with a known good one from a '72 and the fuse blows again as soon as I turn the stalk to position 1.
My electrical tools are (is) limited to a test light, though friends have more and more knowledge of electrics albeit not on Alfas.
I've lived without driving evenings for 4 years now, but I'm hoping to make a long drive from Columbus, Oh to Winston-Salem, NC for work and would really love to take the spider. Any suggestions as to where to start poking around?
Thanks,
Niels
#5 fuse would blow as soon as I turn the stalk to first position. I replaced all the gauge lights and for a short (pun intended) time had everything working with the exception of side markers. Lights went out when putting nuts back on the passenger tail light. Jiggle with finger a wire behind the housing and all is on again, no fuse blown. Went for a drive and hit the wipers (on a different fuse) to clear dew and all is dark again and the fuse is blown.
Pull light out again, replace all the female connectors on the ground wire series, clean more terminals and the ground on the passenger tail light and everything works again until I put the light assembly back in the car with all the bolts. Blow the same fuse a few more times trying to track down a source of the short at the passenger tail light assembly. I swapped out a whole tail light assembly with a known good one from a '72 and the fuse blows again as soon as I turn the stalk to position 1.
My electrical tools are (is) limited to a test light, though friends have more and more knowledge of electrics albeit not on Alfas.
I've lived without driving evenings for 4 years now, but I'm hoping to make a long drive from Columbus, Oh to Winston-Salem, NC for work and would really love to take the spider. Any suggestions as to where to start poking around?
Thanks,
Niels