OK, this has had me going for years. My horn works so I didn't worry about;
then as Frank said it started honking when the column and wheel connected.
The felt bushing had slipped. BTW, when I first attached the wheel, it
honked; didn't need to push the button. I had a large nylon washer and
placed it between the wheel and the bezel(contact ring). Problem solved.
Not kosher though.
My steering rack had no ground strap from the rack to the chassis. I have
seen 3 others that do and they appeared to be original.......small silver
woven wire.
We're these on the car originally? If I attached a ground strap the horn
honks continually. Just wondering.
Dave
59 :{)
Frank Clarici wrote:
> Mike Maclean wrote:
> >
> > I'm having a heck of a time trying to figure out how to complete the
> > circuit for the horn on my Bugeye.
> > I'm
> > ready to run a wire from the bottom bolt of the brass pinion cover to
> > one of the mounting bolts of the steering rack bracket. That's not
> > right. Any ideas?
>
> Mike
>
> I have had this problem more then once. Especially when you paint
> everything nice and purdy.
> On one Bugeye I did just what you said, run a separate ground from the
> rack to the frame.
> For a test, just try hooking up a temporary ground to the steering
> wheel, if the horn blows, you found the problem.
> The 67 I am working on had this same problem. After a few miles of
> driving, the steering column ground magically came back all by itself.
> The rack *should* ground where it bolts to the frame, but it's mounted
> on rubber gaskets. I ran a small wire from the grease nipple to the rack
> bolt (tastfully done with black wire as not to be noticed) this did the
> trick.
>
> --
>
> Frank Clarici
> Toms River, NJ
> Too Many Sprites Again
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