Now there are a couple of things you need to sort out and it may be best to go back and check everything one by one.
Does the horn actually work?
There should be two wires leading to the horn.
- A brown wire. This should have constant power.
- A brown wire with black stripe. This goes to chassis ground via the horn button.
Test the horn, by bridging the terminal with Brown/Black directly to the chassis of the vehicle. The horn should sound.
If it works, connect everything back as it originally was.
If it doesn't work, check that there is power on the Brown wire with a test lamp.
If the there is power but it still doesn't sound swap the wires to the opposite terminals and re-test.
If it still doesn't work, replace the horn.
Once you know the horn works you can trace the problem back up the wiring.
With your test lamp, the lead grounded, test that the Brown/Black wire coming out of the harness near the steering column, has power (or just ground it and the horn should sound.)
If there is no power or the horn doesn't sound. There is a break or disconnection between the horn and the steering column harness.
If everything works to that point, your problem is in the button or contact ring.
Test the button. A multi meter on continuity works best check between the ground lead (Black wire) and the connector on the back of the button. You should get continuity when the button is depressed and not when the button is in its normal non-depressed state.
If you get continuity, your problem is in your contact ring. (Or connections.)
The connections,
- The black lead on the horn button connects to the copper terminal that is bolted under the nut on the steering wheel.
- The terminal under the centre of the horn button, connects to a Brown/Black wire with bullet connector that comes from the contact finger.
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