Black Widow Posted July 21, 2009 Report Posted July 21, 2009 When I bought my P15 the horns were disconnected. I hooked the wires up and they blew continously. I figured it was the relay. I bought a replacement 6 volt relay but it only has three posts, the one on my car has four. I purchased a NOS Mopar relay on ebay and installed it Sunday. I disconnected each wire and made the connections to the same post on the new one. Hooked the horns up and they still blow constant. Could this relay be bad also? Is it possible that the wires are not connected correctly? I have the manual, but it doesn't help much with the wiring. Quote
Young Ed Posted July 21, 2009 Report Posted July 21, 2009 You probably have a bad wire down the steering column. Both your relays may be fine now. Quote
Jim Yergin Posted July 21, 2009 Report Posted July 21, 2009 Have you checked the ground wire from the horn button on the steering wheel? When you press the button it grounds the circuit and the horn sounds. If that wire is shorting out or the horn button is making constant contact the horns will constantly sound. Jim Yergin Quote
Black Widow Posted July 21, 2009 Author Report Posted July 21, 2009 (edited) Thanks for the tip Ed. Is there some way to verify that? The thought of taking it apart doesn't really thrill me. But then again if I can get the horns to work, that may thrill me more. Jim, I believe I can figure that out. The manual I have shows a pretty good exploded view of the horn button assy. Thanks for your help. Edited July 21, 2009 by Black Widow Quote
Young Ed Posted July 21, 2009 Report Posted July 21, 2009 If its still the factory wire there is a bullet connector at the bottom of the steering box. Unplug that and hook everything else up. Then plug it back in and see if the horns honk instantly. Otherwise you'll have to unplug it at the bottom and pull it out for a visual inspection. Quote
greg g Posted July 21, 2009 Report Posted July 21, 2009 the horn circuit is powered either hot ign off or hot ign on. The horn button provides the ground to complete the circuit. There is a wire running up the steering post that connects the horn to the ground through the button. If the wire is frayed inside the column it will sound the horn. If you want to change it, remove the horn button discinnect the wire from the assembly and attach a new wire to it and pull it out and the new wire through the steering column by locating the end coming out of the steering gear box. Ther should be a bakelite wire connector there that allows a disconect of the wire coming from the relay. Quote
Tim Frank Posted July 23, 2009 Report Posted July 23, 2009 (edited) When I bought my P15 the horns were disconnected. I hooked the wires up and they blew continously. I figured it was the relay. I bought a replacement 6 volt relay but it only has three posts, the one on my car has four. I purchased a NOS Mopar relay on ebay and installed it Sunday. I disconnected each wire and made the connections to the same post on the new one. Hooked the horns up and they still blow constant. Could this relay be bad also? Is it possible that the wires are not connected correctly? I have the manual, but it doesn't help much with the wiring. Make sure that the horns are good. I just replaced both horns for the same reason....blowing fuses. They can (and did) develop internal short to ground, especially if you live in a winter snow zone and they use salt on the roads. Just run a wire from the battery neg to the neg terminal on horn....just momentarily. If you get a hummm or funny "croaking", horn is shot. Edited July 23, 2009 by Tim Frank additional info Quote
Young Ed Posted July 23, 2009 Report Posted July 23, 2009 Tim my horns were doing that. A cleaning of the points inside there and an adjustment had them honking like new again Quote
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