Pipe Wrench
Well-known member
- Joined
- Feb 11, 2017
- Messages
- 66
I have noticed that my car's door warning light features a rectifier diode. I "think" rectifier diodes are meant to block high voltages. Why would the door warning light (red light in the door panel that comes on when door is opened), which runs on 12-14.5 Volt be equipped with such a diode?
The light itself is an incandescent festoon bulb. The car has an electronic "comfort control module" to which this door warning light is connected. The "comfort control module" does such things as dim the light instead of turning it abruptly off, and it also knows the door status, which is important for the alarm system and door locks.
Does the diode maybe somehow prevent the door light in the other door from coming on when one door is being opened?
The "comfort control module" knows when a door is open thanks to micro-switches in the door lock control modules.
This is how the door warning light is wired:
The light itself is an incandescent festoon bulb. The car has an electronic "comfort control module" to which this door warning light is connected. The "comfort control module" does such things as dim the light instead of turning it abruptly off, and it also knows the door status, which is important for the alarm system and door locks.
Does the diode maybe somehow prevent the door light in the other door from coming on when one door is being opened?
The "comfort control module" knows when a door is open thanks to micro-switches in the door lock control modules.
This is how the door warning light is wired:
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