I did some testing. Out of the 7 wires on that large connector, the centre three are dead when the key is on. If I apply power to that point, the dead ccts start working again. I then took the connector off and ran the same test on the switch itself. When the key is on, there is no continuity between the power wire going into the switch and those three centre pins. It most assuredly is the switch. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Brad Hogg" <roadhogg@xxxxxxx> To: <mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Friday, December 12, 2003 6:08 PM Subject: Re: IML: 1990 Imperial Electrical Issue I took the switch out but that yielded me nothing as I can test the electrical connections to it just as well with it in the car. I learned something though. Taking the switch out is a snap...three of those little tamper proof screws and off it comes. Putting it back in requires some finnese however. You need to align both the column lock paul and the shift lever lock paul while reinstalling the switch. This is not impossible, you just need to be aware of the fact that it is necessary. What I found was the three wires in the middle of the long connector have no power to them when the car is running. I am still waiting on a diagram to know what these wires do. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Michael Humphries" <mjhumphri@xxxxxxxxx> To: <mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Friday, December 12, 2003 12:55 PM Subject: Re: IML: 1990 Imperial Electrical Issue If I remember correctly. The switch isn't hard to get out, but I beleive my fathers was held in with "security torx" screws. I know he took his to the chrysler dealer the first time, and bought the right screwdriver the second time. A secuirty torx will look like a traditional torx, only on the screw driver there will be a hole in the middle of the bit end. The screw has a stud in the middle of the torx head that prevents a regular torx screwdriver from working. I'm not certain, but I expect the NewYorker and Dynasty switch will work. My dad has a New Yorker as well. The switches look identical. The only difference I notice, is that the New Yorker has Quad high beams (all four lights on) while the Imperial uses flip-flop high beams (only two high beams on, low beam shut off). I suspect this is just a difference in the wiring going to the headlights. I suspect the switches are the same.