Headlight Nightmare..... Did i burn up my dimmer switch?
#11
What NHK projectors are you using? Keep in mind HID's don't have separate "bulbs" for high/low. They use one bulb and there is a shutter inside the housing that moves to provide the light pattern to raise up a bit. You need to use relays to provide power at low/high. Supply power to the relays from the battery and use the headlight switch for powering the relays(high/low). You will also need to wire up the shutter to the high relay so it will raise the beam pattern. Are these what you are using? Read the note:
Wiring: Please note that these units come with 4 bare wire leads. One power and ground for each of the low and high beam inputs. We offer pre-attached 9006 and 9005 inputs for easier hook up. Single filament applications can use a direct connection to factory low beam plug with a high beam splitter. Dual filament applications will require a MotoControl wiring harness to make this unit plug and play.
Wiring: Please note that these units come with 4 bare wire leads. One power and ground for each of the low and high beam inputs. We offer pre-attached 9006 and 9005 inputs for easier hook up. Single filament applications can use a direct connection to factory low beam plug with a high beam splitter. Dual filament applications will require a MotoControl wiring harness to make this unit plug and play.
Last edited by quadrunnerjake; 06-29-2024 at 08:43 PM.
#12
yes it is a 2001, i have a service manual and basically from what i can tell {their diagrams are had to read with the whole quad and without quad headlight markings everywhere} the dimmer switch (the stalk for brights) controls that third pin.
#13
What NHK projectors are you using? Keep in mind HID's don't have separate "bulbs" for high/low. They use one bulb and there is a shutter inside the housing that moves to provide the light pattern to raise up a bit. You need to use relays to provide power at low/high. Supply power to the relays from the battery and use the headlight switch for powering the relays(high/low). You will also need to wire up the shutter to the high relay so it will raise the beam pattern. Are these what you are using? Read the note:
Wiring: Please note that these units come with 4 bare wire leads. One power and ground for each of the low and high beam inputs. We offer pre-attached 9006 and 9005 inputs for easier hook up. Single filament applications can use a direct connection to factory low beam plug with a high beam splitter. Dual filament applications will require a MotoControl wiring harness to make this unit plug and play.
Wiring: Please note that these units come with 4 bare wire leads. One power and ground for each of the low and high beam inputs. We offer pre-attached 9006 and 9005 inputs for easier hook up. Single filament applications can use a direct connection to factory low beam plug with a high beam splitter. Dual filament applications will require a MotoControl wiring harness to make this unit plug and play.
#15
Normal operation before it started acting like that. Truck off: pin 1 hot pin 2 off pin 3 off, Low beam on; pin 1 hot pin 2 ground pin 3 off, Hi Beam on; pin 1 ground pin 2 off pin 3 hot.
Last edited by quadrunnerjake; 06-29-2024 at 06:53 PM. Reason: add more info
#16
#17
[QUOTE=HeyYou;3590011]Looks power power is fed from Violet wire on left side, violet with red trace on right side. Do you have quad headlamps?? (sport truck?)
If you are seeing power anywhere else, (assuming unplugged from BOTH headlamps, that means all four on a sport truck) you have a short somewhere.
so the left wire is pin 1 [common] and switches from hot to ground when hi beam activated, middle pin 2 is low beam ground, right pin 3 is high beam hot
pin 3 should only go het when activated by the dimmer switch i believe. So if my high beam hot wire is staying hot and not switching off when high beams are turned off would it be a faulty dimmer? also it is a non sport. im not the best at reading the dodge wiring diagrams due to all the with and without quad headlight markings that dont really make sense to me, the problem is both 9004 plugs
If you are seeing power anywhere else, (assuming unplugged from BOTH headlamps, that means all four on a sport truck) you have a short somewhere.
so the left wire is pin 1 [common] and switches from hot to ground when hi beam activated, middle pin 2 is low beam ground, right pin 3 is high beam hot
pin 3 should only go het when activated by the dimmer switch i believe. So if my high beam hot wire is staying hot and not switching off when high beams are turned off would it be a faulty dimmer? also it is a non sport. im not the best at reading the dodge wiring diagrams due to all the with and without quad headlight markings that dont really make sense to me, the problem is both 9004 plugs
Last edited by quadrunnerjake; 06-29-2024 at 07:10 PM.
#19
2 lamp system.
Before i tested my harness:
pin 1 is R/O and is hot when vehicle is off and when low beams are on, Ground when hi beam is on
Pin 2 V/W is ground only when low beam active
pin 3(V/R) is hot only when hi beams are on
After i tested harness
Pin 1 hot when vehicle is off and when low beams are on, Ground when hi beam is on
Pin 2 ground only when low beam active
Pin 3 always hot
Before i tested my harness:
pin 1 is R/O and is hot when vehicle is off and when low beams are on, Ground when hi beam is on
Pin 2 V/W is ground only when low beam active
pin 3(V/R) is hot only when hi beams are on
After i tested harness
Pin 1 hot when vehicle is off and when low beams are on, Ground when hi beam is on
Pin 2 ground only when low beam active
Pin 3 always hot
#20
Because of the melting headlight switches on older models the headlights on 99+ are "ground switched". The pin on the bulb that is typically used for ground is powered directly from the PDC and the headlight/hi beam switches connect either filament to ground. Incandescent light bulbs don't care which way the current flows but aftermarket LED/HID do so that is one thing to consider. In stock form with the lights off you will measure battery power on all three headlight pins, that is because one pin gets power (see above) and the other two are just dangling unconnected. The filaments are very low resistance and a voltmeter places no load on a circuit so it just reads 12V on the other side of the filaments. Switching on either filament connects that side to ground (no voltage reading) but the other filament is still unconnected and still reads 12V.
Edit: I think I know where the confusion is coming from. What I wrote above is correct but the high beam indicator in the dash works the same way. Even with the headlight bulbs removed there will be 12V on the high beam side with high beams off just getting there a different way through the dash indicator light.
Edit: I think I know where the confusion is coming from. What I wrote above is correct but the high beam indicator in the dash works the same way. Even with the headlight bulbs removed there will be 12V on the high beam side with high beams off just getting there a different way through the dash indicator light.
Last edited by DerTruck; 06-30-2024 at 12:42 AM.