What Is a Driver Squib, and Why Replace it?

I hinted at a rather nagging issue that has bugged us since taking our Dodge Ram 2500 to a favorite shop back in southern California. Okay, I did more than hint. This is that promise I’m keeping. First, a short story.

A Good Shop is Hard to Find on the Road

As full-time RVers, it’s often hard to find a good, reputable, and cheap mechanic – pick any two, you rarely get all three. After this latest experience, I’m hoping Rene will agree to never take our truck back to a certain shop for anything other than an oil change. If that.

Dodge Ram Trouble Codes

After Rene picked up our truck from that certain cheap and reputable shop, the air bag light came on, and stayed on, every time we turned the key. The long-time family friend assured us the issue was unrelated to any of the work they did – which entailed removing and replacing the steering wheel – even going so far as to even say the air bag warning was a recall issue. So we went to a Dodge dealer for a closer look, where they printed out the Diagnostic Trouble Codes I was unable to scan with our cheap OBD2 Scanner…remember that U3FFF code I was talking about?

To make this short story just a bit longer, we first had that first U code diagnosed at another favorite shop in Colorado a couple years ago, when we had the TIPM replaced. They told us the “Lost Communication With Radio” warning was related to a common issue with aftermarket radios installed in Dodge vehicles. We were going to have them look at that again when we got back to Colorado. We won’t bother, now that we’ve found another good shop in Kerrville, Texas. Because something happened on the way from California to Texas that urged us to take care of those other codes immediately.

Oh, by the way, it was the air bag that lost communication originally, so I thought for sure all of this was related. And it was the low beam control circuit issue that eventually resulted in replacing the TIPM, so I thought we were screwed. Neither is indeed the case.

Dodge Ram Air Bag Light

Why Replace the Squib? AKA: Clock Spring

After that air bag light came on, and with no MIL codes showing up via the OBD-II scanner, we made the choice to have the truck looked at once we got to Texas. Just over a hundred or so miles short of our destination, I realized we had no cruise control. Within minutes the hazard lights flashed, all on their own.  “What the?”

I barely finished whispering those words when that same ghost honked the. “Was that you!?” Rene started to freak out.

“No, ha ha!” I was pretty freaked out myself. Enough to not even stop for fuel. I didn’t want to stop anywhere in the middle of nowhere in case whatever was going on might keep us from going on.

Dodge Ram Driver Squib

What Does the Clock Spring Do?

We lost cruise control. The horn honked itself, but wouldn’t honk when I tried. The hazard lights were acting up. And the air bag light was on. A faulty squib was the cause for all of the above. The Clock Spring (aka: Squib) provides electrical connections for various circuits within the steering wheel while allowing the wheel to turn.

“The British call it a Squib. We call it a clock spring.” I showed all those codes to the guy at the first shop I visited. He said the Squib codes were likely unrelated to the U codes. Great. He also said the closest part was five days away, and that he couldn’t do anything about the “Lost Communication” issue without putting the stock radio back in. Next…

Referrals are gold when is comes to mechanics, so we asked some fellow RVer friends who had spent a lot of time in the area. My next stop was A1 Transmission Specialists in Kerrville Texas. No this wasn’t a transmission issue, but they listed automotive electric services as a specialty, where the guy at the first shop told me: “I’m no Ace…I have no way of troubleshooting that,” when I asked to speak with their Ace electrical guy.

Anyway, the guys at A1 know their stuff. And they had me out of there before lunch with answers to all my questions and concerns. You see, I had this theory about that Squib – once I understood what it was and what it does.

Dodge Ram Clock Spring

You see that blue pin on top of the clock spring there? It should not be bent like that. I suspect that at some point, a certain mechanic at a certain shop which may have removed our steering wheel might have forced the wheel back in place bending that pin – perhaps ignoring the two big warnings to “REFER TO SERVICE MANUAL PRIOR TO FITTING.” They are written in English after all.

All what questions and concerns?

We got a new Squib, and that took care of the air bag light. So the air bag was losing commincation in the clock spring. Yeah, we still have a U code for it losing communication with the radio, but that’s only because we don’t have the original Dodge installed radio. “You can’t clear that code, and it doesn’t matter.” The A1 mechanic reassured me that we still have functioning air bags. The system simply isn’t communicating with the radio that used to be there.

And that dreaded low beam issue? I’m a firm believer that there are no coincidences, but that was a coincidence, and this A1 mechanic was an Ace. He found a broken wire coming out of the TIPM, and after a quick solder job we were on our way with working headlights. We also completed our Texas state vehicle inspection since A1 does that too, and there’s no way we would have passed with an air bag light and no left low beam!

Epilogue

Had I known what those Squib codes were all about, or believed its replacement would fix what I thought was a much bigger can of worms, I may have attempted to do the job myself with help from what looks like an excellent instructional video of how to replace the Dodge Ram clock spring…

Honestly, I haven’t watched the whole thing. And hopefully I never need to!

10 thoughts on “What Is a Driver Squib, and Why Replace it?”

  1. Or if your ever in Vegas I can do that for you. This tool will let you adjust your tire pressure lights as well as program keys and more. But if your ever in Vegas is be happy to help!

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  2. Hey Jim, I can fix your list communication with radio code. It’s fairly easy. You can do it too. Get an OBDLink Mx and alfaobd. In body control module disable the radio bus. What it does is stops trying to communicate with your radio. I did this when I put a pioneer evic-5100nex. No more codes. The down side is if you have uconnect you’ll have to disable that too. You’ll also be able to pull specific codes on your vehicle any u code and more. The OBDLink costs about 80$ and alfaobd is around 50. It’s well worth it!

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  3. Glad things worked out, You guys may have to put Kerrville on your list of places for return visits. Hope you have had a chance to check out Bandera. Great dance halls and bars there

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  4. Terrific write-up, Jim, glad you found a great shop to get that crazy set of gremlins fixed. And I loved the line, “I didn’t want to stop anywhere in the middle of nowhere in case whatever was going on might keep us from going on” — perfect!

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