Trailer Light Problems

Wellcraft170

Petty Officer 2nd Class
Joined
Aug 11, 2008
Messages
147
Went out the other day to test all the lights were working cause im taking the boat to the lake this weekend. Nothing was working except the running light on the right side of the trailer. I've went through everything through diagnosing the problem switched out the main wiring going to each side of the trailer, a new harness, even purchased new lights....still only have a running light on the right side... the ground is grounded to the trailer. i also just got the wiring set up in my car last month. any suggestions? cant drive 3 hours north without any lights :(
 

Leardriver

Petty Officer 1st Class
Joined
Oct 7, 2008
Messages
382
There is no magic recommendation.
Hook up the trailer light plug to a power source, such as the tow vehicle, turn on the parking lights, get a test light, and test for power to wherever you are questioning power availability. If none is present, back track to where you do have power. Figuring out if your lights work sort of takes care of itself if you verify power and ground.​
 

alldodge

Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Mar 8, 2009
Messages
43,547
Its either the trailer or the truck. Running lights on one side is controlled by the brown wire and it covers both sides of the trailer. Your only seeing one side so there is a bad connection and I'm thinking your connector

Trailer wiring.jpg
 

meder24

Seaman
Joined
Aug 5, 2014
Messages
71
I had a similar problem before where only my Left side lights would work. I too had my lights grounded to the trailer. I got rid of the trailer ground and just wired the grounds directly to the ground on the plug from my vehicle. After that, no more problems. Bad grounds are common issues.
 

Maclin

Admiral
Joined
May 27, 2007
Messages
6,761
Did they work right after you got the car setup? What kind of car, who did the setup.
 

Wellcraft170

Petty Officer 2nd Class
Joined
Aug 11, 2008
Messages
147
I had a similar problem before where only my Left side lights would work. I too had my lights grounded to the trailer. I got rid of the trailer ground and just wired the grounds directly to the ground on the plug from my vehicle. After that, no more problems. Bad grounds are common issues.


i was thinking of that..howd you connect the ground to the plug from your vehicle? just spliced it?
 

Gary H NC

Fleet Admiral
Joined
Dec 1, 2005
Messages
8,972
I would look at the wiring on the tow vehicle.......Something is not right there.
A test light or multi-meter should find the problem.
 

Illinoid

Petty Officer 2nd Class
Joined
Sep 28, 2013
Messages
137
Keep your hat on...I think after half a century of dealing with these problems...I seem to have pulled all my hair out. Every time I get cocky and think all trailer problems are simple and I have seen it all I get one that takes me a few hours to figure out and fix.
 

meder24

Seaman
Joined
Aug 5, 2014
Messages
71
i was thinking of that..howd you connect the ground to the plug from your vehicle? just spliced it?


I just wired all of the ground wires on the lights themselves directly to the white wire coming from the trailer plug.
 

meder24

Seaman
Joined
Aug 5, 2014
Messages
71
I used to have a Nitro myself. When I installed my trailer wiring harness, I had some issues with the connectors to stock tail light bulbs. For some reason, the connectors in the harness would not fully engage the stock bulb plugs on the vehicle. Unlikely to be your issue, but something to confirm is secure.
 

Bkok33

Seaman
Joined
May 3, 2016
Messages
72
I had a problem with my ground wire, checked it and regrounded it. Works better now. How old is the trailer? Maybe it needs to be rewired.
 

Outkast

Cadet
Joined
Jul 3, 2016
Messages
20
Hello there, I do this for a living I'm a trailer mechanic and a Draw-Tite hitch pro. first question, did the mechanic who installed your trailer lights just tap into your lights or did he use a powered module? Nitro's need a powered module they don't produce enough amperage to power a trailer and it's self. How you can tell is under your hood you should see a yellow or red (if it's a Curt wiring kit) fuse holder. Second, dose the flat 4 plug on the trailer have one or two brown wires, if it's one follow it back it should then split into two it maybe that connection. Could also be just you lights if they're 194 bulbs they are notorious for the sockets going bad, and yes double check your grounds. Hope this helps.
 

Wellcraft170

Petty Officer 2nd Class
Joined
Aug 11, 2008
Messages
147
Hello there, I do this for a living I'm a trailer mechanic and a Draw-Tite hitch pro. first question, did the mechanic who installed your trailer lights just tap into your lights or did he use a powered module? Nitro's need a powered module they don't produce enough amperage to power a trailer and it's self. How you can tell is under your hood you should see a yellow or red (if it's a Curt wiring kit) fuse holder. Second, dose the flat 4 plug on the trailer have one or two brown wires, if it's one follow it back it should then split into two it maybe that connection. Could also be just you lights if they're 194 bulbs they are notorious for the sockets going bad, and yes double check your grounds. Hope this helps.



thanks for the tips. i'll try it again in a few days. i originally thought it had to be something with the wiring set up in the car. I re-wired the trailer, and got new lights just to see if it was the actual lights themselves and it wasnt. I tried a different extender wire, and also tried a different car, maybe ill try working with the ground wire. all i have is the right light working on a solid running light. thats all that works
 

Tony T.

Petty Officer 2nd Class
Joined
Jun 5, 2007
Messages
178
I had wiring problems last year 2015 and discovered it when I bought my Tracker boat, after making the boat deal I hooked up the trailer and had lights all around except the boat trailer left light on back would not work. The guy I bought the boat from said man I just pulled it home from our lake lot this weekend and all lights were working fine. Long story short the problem turned out to be in my truck 2003 Dodge Ram . Mechanic buddy of mine spent over 3 hours tracing the wires from the 7 pin plug in all the way to the fuse box under the hood,he didn't have a wiring schematic either which was a pain in the rear and the color code changed about 3/4 of way through the trace. Turns out he had to replace my fuse box under the hood to fix the problem, and he used a fuse box from a salvage yard, it cost $100 bucks for that used one, he told me last one he bought new and he didn't specify if it was for a Dodge was around $700 bucks. Man I'm glad the used fuse box worked, it's fixed now. I have 3 trailers I pull and the same light left back on each trailer was the one that would not work before he fixed the problem.


Tony
 
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