This list has givem me THOUSANDS of dollars of great advice in the four weeks I have owned my DMC. I'd like to throw a little back, for what this may be worth to you. Fair warning: I make up words where I don't know their names... My Headlight switch was misbehaving. It took some 6-8 pokes to finally engage. As a fix, I took the switch apart (very simple) Cleaned and tightened the electrical connections and added a "friction strip" between the black casing and the steel "click controller" bar. The bar it turned out was flopping around and dropping out of its channel. The friction strip I used was simply a 1" by 3/8" stip of stiff paper folded in thirds. Switch works like new. Maybe better. good luck with yours. My Exterior Mirror switch was also misbehaving. The fix for it it turned out was to straighten the metal parts that were a bit bent. The control "joystick" pulls off with a good yank, and the casing opens by cutting off the plastic melt-downs with a razor blade. Pull the switch apart, being careful not to let springs and ball bearings fly everywhere. You should not need to adjust anything on the joystick side at all. Just put back the bearings onto the springs and back onto the "quattropus" and set it aside. The three dumbell- looking parts go onto springs on the switch. I found that a dab of grease also acts like glue to hold lightweight things where they belong. Clean the contact surfaces of everything with dull sandpaper,steel wool or a pencil eraser! The "disk" is the critical component. Mine was bent in several ways. You will want to straighten things so that everything is parallel. You'll understand once you're in there. Assembly is simple. You will need to re-seal the casing by using a electronics-type soldering iron. If you use a plumbing-type one you'll melt everything! Just touch it to each of the places where you sliced off the plastic "melt-downs" and you can also "weld" the back to the casing by sliding the soldering iron along the seam. Works like new... My dash dimmer switch was also not working. Disassembly and a dab of epoxy and solder and it now works OK... Not perfect... Good luck -Steve #3302