I’m not 100% sure, but cosmetically I believe new ones use the international triangle symbol for hazard and originals say “Hazard” like in your picture. I believe they’re functionally the same.
79 528i
76 530i - Stored since 1992, can it be brought back to life?
86 944- 2023 project
78 F150- Everyone needs a truck
The difference I see in the 2 hazard switchs is the rear terminals. same number of prongs but the other one has an extra plate connecting an inner "pin"
My haynes manual electrical chart says No 52 - which indicates 6 lines to hazard switch
74 525 auto
76 525 - 4 speed, LPG and holley carb- restoring
77 528i- 4 speed manual
77 528i -4 speed manual getting rusty
79 528i auto - a SA car?
80 528i auto - ready to relicense
81 528i +3.5ltr - auto - restoring
86 525e 5 speed manual- dd
Beyond expected cosmetic differences, there are definitely regional differences in functionality.
I naively bought a U.S. spec hazard light switch for my German-spec Euro car a couple years ago. These two parts actually differ by one pin, so definitely no substitution....won't even fit in the female socket.
I haven't dug into the schematics, but the hazard switch is intimately tied into many of the lights, apparently, which would
seemingly explain why there are so many pins. Parking light configuration is distinctly different between the Euro and U.S. cars, which factors into this too.
Jcat wrote: Tue Sep 20, 2022 8:57 pm
However... I put a Euro switch in my US car. Works like a champ despite the physical differences re the extra pin. Just had to swap out the buttons.