AngryFish
TYF Newbie
- Joined
- Aug 16, 2019
- Posts
- 6
- Reaction score
- 13
My truck is a 2003. Showing some age but still moving along.What year is your truck? I have a 2001. My transfer case control buttons don't do a LED self check.
I actually have no issues with my transfer case right now. Just bought a spare one to rebuild so I have a fresh transfer case. Well I have ONE issue, when I put it in 4wd, the LED doesn't illuminate in the instrument cluster. I cannot figure out why. The instrument panel is good, I took it out and probed the LED.
Thanks for tip on encoder! I will add that to original post / parts list. Very helpful.
Also the gasket, I forgot to put it on the parts list. I'll add that too.
The switch module should start up right away and do a self-check just like the dash. All the LED's should light just like all the lights on the dash cluster so you can see if they are burnt out.
Each LED is on its own wire, with a transistor on the common/ground side. Could be a wire thing, could be a transistor failure. Easiest way is to find someone with a scanner or beg, borrow, or steal (or purchase) your own bi-di scanner. They can turn on the LED's individually. It is also possible for the LED itself to fail, so you can check to see if the resistance to ground through the transistor changes when the light is on (positive lead of the meter on the wire and common on the ground or it may not work). This is a very low current circuit, so don't use a standard test light or you will likely have to replace a transistor.
More commonly is a broken solder joint on either a pin for the switch module or on the board for the LED or resistor. I had a similar issue with most of the modules in the dash. Once I reflowed the solder joints, I was able to get it working again. The lead-free solder is very bad about fractures due to the brittle nature of the lead-free solder failing due to the vibration of the car. I've fixed several similar issues on other vehicles, too, with just re-soldering the pins.