handy wrote:
I'm in a courtesy car today, as my car is in to have it's electrics checked over for whatever is leaching charge from the battery overnight. The courtesy car is a VW polio, and in that car it is not possible to have the rear fogs on without first turning on the fron fogs (you pull the light switch out for fogs, one click - fronts, two clicks - fronts and rear).
The Germans do seem to like doing this (both my Passat and Mk2 Golf have it), and it would explain the front fogs on BMWs thing too.
There is a solution though. It appeared to annoy the previous owner of my golf so much that he's cut the wires leading to the front fogs! A less drastic approach would be to remove the bulbs.
I plan to obtain two foglight switches from the version of the Mk2 that didn't have front fogs, and install separate wiring to front and rear. There is no sensible way to have front and rear fogs on the main switch.
For example, the Civic courtesy car has a twiddly thing on the left stalk for fogs. Starting from the top it is marked Rear, Off, Front, Rear. So from the off position, if you turn it towards you, the rear fogs come on, then it returns to the off position (ie. toggle, not latch) if you turn it away from you, the fronts come on and the thing actually latches, you then need to turn it away from you again to get the rears to come on, and again this is a toggle not a latch.
So depending on the state of your front fogs, the action needed to get the rears to come on is reversed. Get it wrong and you'll switch your front fogs off too.
Annoying, but then this is the car that makes it incredibly easy to switch the lights off completely when you are attempting to switch full beams on.
Two switches, is it really that hard? Please car manufacturers, stop trying to be clever about lighting switches, you only make things worse *cough*vauxhall indicators*cough*