Friday, July 31, 2009

That answer sucks follow a clump of wires help us out seems to be common on jeep horns next best answer beside

I would assume that your horn is not working?





What I would do:


Unplug the horns and put a voltmeter on the wires and then push the horn button to see if you get a 12v reading.


....... If you do, replace the horn(s)


........If not, find the horn relay. It should be clicking when you push the horn.





.......If it clicks, Check the output of the relay for the 12v. If it's there and not at the horn, there is a broken wire.





At this point, you can run a new wire from the relay to the horn.





If the relay does NOT click and there's no 12v at the output, the relay may be bad OR it's not getting the ground signal from the horn button. This could mean a broken wire from the horn button through the steering column to the relay.





I know it sounds confusing but if you logically and systematically follow the flow, you'll find the problem. I'm assuming you've checked the fuse, too.





GOOD luck





If you don't know where it is, push the

That answer sucks follow a clump of wires help us out seems to be common on jeep horns next best answer beside
I've never looked for my relay. But sounds like the relay is your problem.... esp. if you can't hear it click but you have power to the button.





Dan Report It

Reply:Deifinetly. Glad you got that straightened out.
Reply:ever what you say;



maintenance repairs

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