water in LED tail light
#1
water in LED tail light
I've had my new taillights for a couple of months now with no major problems but all of a sudden water has started to appear in the passenger side tail light. now being in Canada that water has frozen rock solid. I don't know how to go about fixing this issue.
this is what they looked like before the water. being that these are LED and that i can't remove all the wiring or the lights form them I'm guessing i can't just open them u like a regular set of headlights or tail lights. so does anyone have any ideas.
this is what they looked like before the water. being that these are LED and that i can't remove all the wiring or the lights form them I'm guessing i can't just open them u like a regular set of headlights or tail lights. so does anyone have any ideas.
#2
#3
the ice finally melted inside the light and when i move it around the edges inside the light it doesn't drip out anywhere so I'm guessing its not the outer seal that's broken. the other problem i have right now is getting the water out, i would just let it evaporate but it would leave horrible water marks all over the inside of the lenses.
#4
#5
upon further inspection i found that the water is getting through the bulb socket were the regular tail light bulb would go the problem is that spot is no filled with the lights circuit board. so I'll need to figure out a way to cover that up while still letting the 2 wires come out of it. on the side note I'll probably have to open the light up to remove all the water. now the problem with this is there are still wires and circuits inside it that can't be removed until the assembly is split in to but I'm not sure if it is safe to bake it while this stuff is still in there.
Last edited by dracowing14; 01-18-2011 at 08:15 AM.
#7
#8
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The member JP7 has attempted baking his after-market tail lights to disassemble them (not the same ones) and had bad results. Be very careful if you try doing that, because his were quite brittle.
#9
I'm trying to take part a stock ford ranger tail light just as practice and I'm having a hell of a time, the plastic lip around the edge of the tail light melts long before the silicone is hot enough to split apart. i have tried the oven method once but the silicone wouldn't give up and then i tried the heat gun method and the plastic lip started melting. but luckily i caught it before any damage was done. what is the perfect temp for the oven method.
#10
if i recall the only way to get a ranger taillight apart is actually cutting the housing. they won't bake apart IIRC.
on a side note, i have the same tails you do, just with night shades on them, and i havent had any problems with condensation. but my old set that i had, (red lens instead) were getting condensation on the reverse lense.
on a side note, i have the same tails you do, just with night shades on them, and i havent had any problems with condensation. but my old set that i had, (red lens instead) were getting condensation on the reverse lense.
#13
#14
I honestly don't think you'll be able to get them apart in one piece. If anything you could try using a heat gun, but you'll probably end up ruining them. I say just try to get as much water as you can out and dry the rest and leave them be.
#16
If the flange is not perpendicular to the lens this will not work. It does not matter if you bake them inside out hanging from a tree.
#19
No the water would be on the outside then!
I've bought so many sets of tail lights in the last few months to build the LED lights I'm working on now - don't you guys think I'd have some success with this?... I've probably taken apart between 7-10 lamps, breaking most of them. Learn from my expensive mistakes.
I'm not saying that it is impossible because the tail lights that I buy are from a different manufacturer. I don't like the Chinese LEDs that come in those premade LED lights as they don't have enough of them, and they cant handle any current.
Think about it though, if the flange is indeed not perpendicular how can you open them without breaking the plastic?
I'm not saying that it is impossible because the tail lights that I buy are from a different manufacturer. I don't like the Chinese LEDs that come in those premade LED lights as they don't have enough of them, and they cant handle any current.
Think about it though, if the flange is indeed not perpendicular how can you open them without breaking the plastic?
Last edited by Jp7; 01-18-2011 at 12:21 PM.
#20
#25
I also suggested that. Could work.