During installation of the handlebar switches on my '45 Chief, I have discovered that the left side of the handlebars are drilled for the horn button, rather than drilled for the dimmer switch. The screw holes are too close together for the dimmer switch and things simply don't line up. Any suggestions on how to attach the dimmer switch, other than elongate the big hole and drill a new hole for the screw that won't line up correctly. I really hate to modify the bars to fit the switch cover screw holes. Greer sells several switches, from 36-46 (they are all different, and very expensive) but I don't know if the mounting holes will line up correctly. any constructive ideas will be appreciated. thanks
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'45 Chief handlebars...mounting the dimmer switch...
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Originally posted by ChiefTwoKicks View PostDuring installation of the handlebar switches on my '45 Chief, I have discovered that the left side of the handlebars are drilled for the horn button, rather than drilled for the dimmer switch. The screw holes are too close together for the dimmer switch and things simply don't line up. Any suggestions on how to attach the dimmer switch, other than elongate the big hole and drill a new hole for the screw that won't line up correctly. I really hate to modify the bars to fit the switch cover screw holes. Greer sells several switches, from 36-46 (they are all different, and very expensive) but I don't know if the mounting holes will line up correctly. any constructive ideas will be appreciated. thanks
My 47 has 1 1/2 spacing on he h/l switch.Before 38 the h/l was in the ign. switch
Sounds like you need an earlier switch,38-45 should fit.
Tom
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Appears I have the wrong bars... thats what came in a box full of parts when I bought the bike. Oh well !! I'll very likely drill the bars to fit the correct switch, because buying bars with the right holes pre-drilled is beyond good reasoning, just to fit the correct switch. Then again, putting the wrong switch on the wrong bars isn't smart either, especially when the wrong switch (the plastic one) is 4X the money just to line up the mounting holes (on the wrong 38-39 bars). When I drill the wrong bars and mount the correct switch, no one will ever know the difference, as you won't see the correction under the switch cover. I guess I'll have to go by the old saying... Sometimes, you have to make apple sauce out of horse manure... looks good, but still it leaves a bad taste in your mouth. Thanks to those who responded
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Originally posted by ChiefTwoKicks View PostAppears I have the wrong bars... thats what came in a box full of parts when I bought the bike. Oh well !! I'll very likely drill the bars to fit the correct switch, because buying bars with the right holes pre-drilled is beyond good reasoning, just to fit the correct switch. Then again, putting the wrong switch on the wrong bars isn't smart either, especially when the wrong switch (the plastic one) is 4X the money just to line up the mounting holes (on the wrong 38-39 bars). When I drill the wrong bars and mount the correct switch, no one will ever know the difference, as you won't see the correction under the switch cover. I guess I'll have to go by the old saying... Sometimes, you have to make apple sauce out of horse manure... looks good, but still it leaves a bad taste in your mouth. Thanks to those who responded
Tom
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