Flasher relays have clearly identifiable terminals, marked by numbers. One will be power in, one will be power out and one will be earth (possibly 86). One terminal may run the pilot light, then there's an extra terminal that runs the trailer icon. It should be trivial to test one by wiring input and earth to a battery, then seeing if it clicks continually. If there is no globe connected to the output and it clicks, it's faulty. If it doesn't click on test but clicks in the vehicle then there is a load connected to the flasher before the indicator switch, ie someone's bodged the wiring.
And of course there's no point in using another flasher relay without checking that the pin numbers line up. Electronic flashers have been in use since the late 70's so it shouldn't be impossible to find one with the same pin pattern, even if some of the pilot light pins are missing. Falcons ran square electronic flashers until the later 90's.


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