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#1
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Intermittent Brake Lining Warning Light
My 82 300cd has an intermittent brake lining warning light.
I just had a partially seized caliper, so I rebuilt both front calipers, replaced the rotors, pads and sensors, and used dielectric grease on the clean/dry sensor connection to the harness So no it’s not worn pads, no it’s not bad sensor leads. It’s something else. And it’s the yellow lining light, not the red brake light. I’ve gone through this: W123 dash brake warning lights, a review Wires look good, connection points look ok. Makes me wonder if it’s actually the cluster. In the link above, it looks to me that the charging light and the lining light are isolated by a resistor. I assume that’s to allow for redundancy in the alternator excite circuit. Could that be a clue? Charging system works fine on this car. Anyone have any other experiences troubleshooting this light? I assume perhaps disconnecting both harnesses Underwood would help isolate side/location? Thanks!
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Current Diesels: 1981 240D (73K) 1982 300CD (169k) 1985 190D (169k) 1991 350SD (113k) 1991 350SD (206k) 1991 300D (228k) 1993 300SD (291k) 1993 300D 2.5T (338k) 1996 Dodge Ram CTD (442k) 1996 Dodge Ram CTD (265k) Past Diesels: 1983 300D (228K) 1985 300D (233K) |
#2
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Has the cluster been removed lately? If yes, is there a possibility that the bulbs for the brake pad warning light and the charging light were switched when plugged back in ? It is possible for the cluster to have a bad ground which is fixed by attaching a new ground wire (brown) from the back of the cluster to the steering column support where the other brown ground wires are attached.
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#3
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Quote:
I’m sure the cluster could use an extra ground. I’ve not seen a w123 car that hasn’t benefitted. That said, the rationale why an extra ground, when the function of the brake light is to turn on when the circuit is shorted to ground, is foreign to me. Since the wiring harness and sensors are all in tact and operating fine, how another ground would improve it, unless there’s some other stray current in the cluster that needs to get directed to ground, is not clear. There is a metal part of the brake wear sensor harness, which is supposed to be touching the mounting point on the caliper. I haven’t tested but think that’s electrically continuous to the light circuit. The connection just needs to be made via the sensor. So for the light to be coming on, some ground path needs to be intermittently being made, as I think voltage from fuse 10 is continuously there to the sensors.
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Current Diesels: 1981 240D (73K) 1982 300CD (169k) 1985 190D (169k) 1991 350SD (113k) 1991 350SD (206k) 1991 300D (228k) 1993 300SD (291k) 1993 300D 2.5T (338k) 1996 Dodge Ram CTD (442k) 1996 Dodge Ram CTD (265k) Past Diesels: 1983 300D (228K) 1985 300D (233K) Last edited by JHZR2; 06-26-2019 at 01:04 PM. |
#4
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The brake wear indicator is pretty simple. Basically a fuse passing power through a light bulb to the wear bars that ground against the brake rotor when they wear through. Make sure the wear bars still have their paint/coating on them. Inspect the wiring to make sure it hasn't rubbed through and is grounding against the chassis somewhere. There's not much more that will make that light glow.
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Current stable: 1995 E320 149K (Nancy) 1983 500SL 120K (SLoL) Black Sheep: 1985 524TD 167K (TotalDumpster™) Gone but not forgotten: 1986 300SDL (RIP) 1991 350SD 1991 560SEL 1990 560SEL 1986 500SEL Euro (Rusted to nothing at 47K!) |
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