zoigna87
Junior Member
Hello. Wasnt sure if this was more appropriate in the interior section or general.
I recently bought a 2019 Ram 1500 tradesman classic. The steering wheel buttons did not work. After searching for a solution it seemed the clock spring was known to go bad so i ordered and changed it. During the process of changing it I found a wire clip had been cut and they connected the wires together with resistors. I will add some pictures. Now i assume this is the airbag first because of the yellow clip matching the yellow clips into air bag. I didnt want to get into a bunch more work currently so i just left it how they had it taped the wires back up and put everything back together.
The steering wheel buttons all function now along with the horn etc so i assume the clock spring was bad. The airbag light came on and i got a message to service airbag system(which was not on before). I would of thought the resistors were a way to trick the system into thinking the airbags were hooked up but as soon as i change the clock spring the light comes on so maybe they did nothing at all or thats not their purpose? I just dont see what you would go through that trouble to hide the code with resistors if the broken clock spring was what was masking the problem anyways.
I guess my question is if i wanted to fix this myself would my next step be to put the wires back into the connector and see what happens? Any suggestions? Also i assume if i take the clock spring back off to fix it later i would need to buy another new one as i pulled the pin out to hook everything back up?
I recently bought a 2019 Ram 1500 tradesman classic. The steering wheel buttons did not work. After searching for a solution it seemed the clock spring was known to go bad so i ordered and changed it. During the process of changing it I found a wire clip had been cut and they connected the wires together with resistors. I will add some pictures. Now i assume this is the airbag first because of the yellow clip matching the yellow clips into air bag. I didnt want to get into a bunch more work currently so i just left it how they had it taped the wires back up and put everything back together.
The steering wheel buttons all function now along with the horn etc so i assume the clock spring was bad. The airbag light came on and i got a message to service airbag system(which was not on before). I would of thought the resistors were a way to trick the system into thinking the airbags were hooked up but as soon as i change the clock spring the light comes on so maybe they did nothing at all or thats not their purpose? I just dont see what you would go through that trouble to hide the code with resistors if the broken clock spring was what was masking the problem anyways.
I guess my question is if i wanted to fix this myself would my next step be to put the wires back into the connector and see what happens? Any suggestions? Also i assume if i take the clock spring back off to fix it later i would need to buy another new one as i pulled the pin out to hook everything back up?