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Restoration and Technical Tips - Boot and Bonnet Switches PDF Print E-mail
Sunday, 01 February 2004
Restoration and Technical Tips
by Michael Brinsden

Boot and Bonnet Switches

How often is it that you’re Boot or Bonnet Light Switch ceases working? For me this has happened innumerable times, usually at night when you want the damn thing to work!

The switch fitted to most Chrysler and Valiant vehicles produced in Australia is a spring loaded contact switch that screws into the body to provide the earth connection. When the Bonnet or the Boot is opened the compressed spring extends and pushes the centre spindle up until the copper sleeve, to which the active wire is connected, contacts the switch body which then completes the earth circuit.

The most common form of fault is that the copper sleeve slips down the centre spindle insulator and fails to meet the switch body to form a circuit. This is easily fixed by depressing the switch centre spindle with your finger and pushing hard on the copper sleeve to force it further up the insulator. Release the centre spindle and the switch contact should allow the boot or bonnet light to turn on.

If this fails to work disconnect the active wire from the copper sleeve and bend the wire out of the way. Remove the protector insulator from the switch body and unscrew the switch from the vehicle body. You will then have easy access to the copper sleeve and the contact part of the switch body. With 200 or 300 grade emery cloth clean the contact section of the switch body and the copper sleeve. Ensure that the copper sleeve contacts the switch body with the spring fully extended. If you wish you can test the contact with a Multimeter – the reading should be .1ohm or less.

Screw the switch back into the vehicle body and tighten lightly with a suitable spanner. Do not over tighten as you will strip the vehicle body thread or the switch thread.

Replace the protector insulator and reconnect the active wire. The light should now turn on satisfactorily.

Some other faults and their remedies-:

? Body thread or switch thread stripped – Wrap aluminium foil around the switch thread and carefully screw into the vehicle body. If you don’t have this try very thin copper sheet.

? Spindle damaged or bent – Replace the whole switch from a wrecked vehicle.

? Wire to switch not active – Check the lighting fuse in the fuse holder. If fuse is OK then there is a wiring fault – probably an open circuit due to broken wires beneath the insulation.
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