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Re: [T3] Horn fook-up


To try to solve the problem of the Horn blues, I checked the Haynes, and got
the following:

<<Chapter 10/Electrical system



23 Horn

1  Horns have a habit of misbehaving and in most cases it is due
to poor contacts along the earth return wire.
2 The horn is mounted under the left front wing. It should not
contact the bodywork at any point except by the mounting
bracket.
3 If the horn fails to work first check the appropriate fuse and
then, with the ignition switched on, check that voltage is
reaching the horn by one of the two wires at the horn terminals.
If not then check the wire back to terminal 15 on the fuse box.
4 Check next that the earth return wire from the horn to the
steering wheel switch is maintaining continuity. This is usually
the problem as en route the circuit has to reach the steering
column, paE£Égh the horn switch and contact the moving
steering shaft to earth. The shaft makes earth contact at the
steering gear and therefore needs a separate earth wire to bridge
the flexible coupling which is also an insulation factor. To be
sure that there is continuity the easiest way is to first remove
the horn ring assembly and then make a circuit (with a test meter; or
wires, battery and bulb) from the bottom of the wire where it
joins the horn to one side of the horn switch. Then do the same
test from the other side of the horn switch to earth.
5 To some people the time (and expense of trying to isolate
the fault, regardless of the problems of fixing it when found are
disproportionate. They therefore simply ignore the original
circuitry and fit a separate switch conveniently nearby and feed
a separate wire back from the horn to earth via the new switch
6 The horn itself may sometimes be faulty. Check it by feeding
a battery supply direct to the two terminals outside the vehicle
wiring system. The setting screw in the back is normally pre-set
so any movement of this in an attempt to make the horn work
should only be as a last resort.>>

To put it simple, the horn button gets its ground from the steering shaft, and
sends it through a wire to the horn. The steering shaft is grounded to the
steering box via a ground wire across the steering shaft coupler, and a ground
wire from the axle beam to the frame. The Haynes also has a 6V wiring diagram.
Btw, its great with text scanning :-)

PerL
73 Variant L

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