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Did you check the solder joints around the pins for breaks?
Name: Brent
His: '04 TDI Golf Mods: None If it's smoken it ain't broken
Family: '15 Jetta Sportwagon
Fun car: '92 Blue Karmann Crabby Cabby Mods: Coils, front and rear swaybars, LED interior lights and some other old things.
Looks like your lighter socket was causing a short, you should probably take it completely out and re-solder it or get a new one. Continuous short could cause a bunch of other problems down the road which are a lot more expensive to fix.
It's not a short, it is an open circuit. Due to the fact that my center console is loose, you can push the console down which pushes the socket out from behind breaking the circuit.
If it was indeed a short I would agree and make the necessary repairs.
I don't see how the lighter socket can even be on the same circuit as the dash lights let alone a open circuit causing them not to work. I know the lighter socket is keyed power but unless the power is in series with the dash light power a open circuit would never cause the dash lights to stop. Otherwise when you have nothing in the lighter socket the dash lights wouldn't work...
All power is likely run out in parallel from the fuse panel so really it sounds like a short drawing the power down to zero in which case it should have blown a fuse.
Name: Brent
His: '04 TDI Golf Mods: None If it's smoken it ain't broken
Family: '15 Jetta Sportwagon
Fun car: '92 Blue Karmann Crabby Cabby Mods: Coils, front and rear swaybars, LED interior lights and some other old things.
I'd need a schematic to fully understand how the circuit is layed out. I can asure you that the lighter socket is indeed part of the circuit in some way and also that it is not a short or short to ground.
Try getting in your car turning the lights on and physically pulling on the outer ring of your lighter socket, I bet you can replicate the problem. Interestingly enough it was a google search that lead me to check this.
Well just saying my dash lights have worked without the whole center console not in the car.
Name: Brent
His: '04 TDI Golf Mods: None If it's smoken it ain't broken
Family: '15 Jetta Sportwagon
Fun car: '92 Blue Karmann Crabby Cabby Mods: Coils, front and rear swaybars, LED interior lights and some other old things.
Yeah it's weird. I don't really know how it works, but it does. I guess if I had more time I could take the center console out and do some metering trying to figure things out.
It wouldn't take much time to pull the socket completely out and check your connections. Better safe than sorry down the road. If it's messing with your lights it may also be doing something to your airbags.
Edit: in some cars the drivers airbag can malfunction from a short in the lighter socket.
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