Gerry
Established Member
Does any of the other interior lights work when the sidelights are on? Glove box, radio, ignition key illumination etc.
Gerry
Gerry
Anybody tell me what the letters/numbers represent, please?
Rather ominously, the brightness control is effected via the cpu.This is the actual cluster and the five bulbs, Red/Black on B7 is from the tail light relay, the actual function is provided by a mosfet to ground. The brightness control works via the gauge assembly cpu to switch this mosfet. On mine when it reaches max or min brightness levels it beeps.
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@Cozzer you say you have no dash dimmer, are you sure? On mine it is the trip button next to the fuel/ temp gauge, push and hold for trip, push changes from total milage to trip and rotate gives dash dimming.
The mark 2 CRV's upto 2006 were the better models, 2007 to 2016 were not as good and now you can have a 1.5 turbo which will not do 200,000 before recycling itself.
As for your dash lights at least they are just simple supply and ground, no electronic dimmer or bar graph display to complicate things.
Now because it is more basic, trace the wires from the bulb holders to the connector and then check the mating pins for live and continuity to ground, Red/Black should not change and grounds are Black. You should be able to follow the circuit through all five bulbs.
@Cozzer you say you have no dash dimmer, are you sure? On mine it is the trip button next to the fuel/ temp gauge, push and hold for trip, push changes from total milage to trip and rotate gives dash dimming.
Does any of the other interior lights work when the sidelights are on? Glove box, radio, ignition key illumination etc.
Gerry
Have you traced the wires(tracks) from the bulb holders to the connector, once you establish these connections you can just apply 12 volts with the dash on the bench and see if they light up. Electrical trouble shooting is just a process of systematic eliminationuntil the fault is pin pointed.
If, from the cct diagram earlier, you know the + and - feeds, you should be able to trace (continuity on the bench, or 12v in the car) from feed to return to and from each bulb? I think you're nearly there, just apply that logic? Check to the 'solder blob' on the lamp holder, not just the track.OK... a bit of progress.
Cluster on kitchen table.
The 4 dials in question have had the bulbs and holders removed, revealing the "top" and "bottom" solder points.
Multimeter at the ready, one lead touching the "top" and then seeing which pin it connects to. Then repeat process, moving the lead to the other side of the bulb holder socket, and again noting which pin shows continuity.
Pins B6, B15 and B16 are the three regulars across all 4 dials....
Not sure where to go now!
What color are these wires, hopefully one is Red/Black and the others both black.Pins B6, B15 and B16 are the three regulars across all 4 dials....
Swapping the cluster may mean a trip to the dealers to code it to the car, that's if they will do it (being a used part). And if the immobilizer is in the cluster - the car won't start until the cluster is paired to the ecu.Just a thought, but if all else fails, have you considered trying to find the part at a breaker's yard, or auto dismantlers as they seem to be called these days?
To old, this was when vehicle electronic's had not become all encompassing. The cluster is pretty basic, old school with multiple wires and not a CAN bus which would then be a nightmare and expensive to resolve. I purchased a 2006 mark 2 CRV even though I could have got a much newer one for the same price because it uses basic wiring and not multiple modules that control everything. Old school is you operate a switch and an item receives power and works, newer technology is you operate a switch then some module decides if it is ok for that item to receive power and then may turn it on for you. All ok until a module gets a blip in the software like my last Peugeot where the body interface module decided to do it's own thing, you would even lose hazzard lights and brake lights as well as indicators which is a real safety concern, then you could not turn the engine off or operate the electric windows. This was a new module, download the vehicle configuration file then recode the keys all an expense, well no more with my HondaSwapping the cluster may mean a trip to the dealers to code it to the car, that's if they will do it (being a used part). And if the immobilizer is in the cluster - the car won't start until the cluster is paired to the ecu.
That was my thought. Could be wrong, though. My 2003 Merc had a lot of electronics.To old, this was when vehicle electronic's had not become all encompassing. The cluster is pretty basic, old school with multiple wires and not a CAN bus which would then be a nightmare and expensive to resolve. I purchased a 2006 mark 2 CRV even though I could have got a much newer one for the same price because it uses basic wiring and not multiple modules that control everything. Old school is you operate a switch and an item receives power and works, newer technology is you operate a switch then some module decides if it is ok for that item to receive power and then may turn it on for you. All ok until a module gets a blip in the software like my last Peugeot where the body interface module decided to do it's own thing, you would even lose hazzard lights and brake lights as well as indicators which is a real safety concern, then you could not turn the engine off or operate the electric windows. This was a new module, download the vehicle configuration file then recode the keys all an expense, well no more with my Honda
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