I am going to throw a wild guess out there and say the rust in the background is likely a contributing factor, a poor ground or power lead will cause odd voltage to the lamps and readings with your meter. you can try for basics running a fresh fog light ground to a clean spot on the frame, the ground does not have to be connected to the main harness.Thanks for the suggestion. I thought about doing LEDs but if I do, I would probably do all the headlights as well and I would rather not do that right now haha.
But I just finished checking the voltage at the fog lamp socket and I may be more stumped than before. I got a reading of 262v and was holding steady while I had the truck idling. I thought that was the cause of my issue, but I went and checked the good passenger side light and I got the same 262v reading. Makes no sense how I am getting this high of a reading on both sockets, when one of the fog lights is working. I doubt the one light runs fine on 262v but who knows haha. I am going to check again tomorrow with a different voltmeter just incase I made a mistake getting the readings.
Lastly, I checked how secure the lamp housing was and it was pretty secure. Could not tell a difference in vibration between the driver and passenger side.
I have also attached a picture to show the blown bulb that I am getting.
Thanks again for all the help.
View attachment 457344
you can verify my guess by ohm testing the grounds on either harness (ground wire to frame) should read 00, if not then you have a poor ground
same with the (power lead to frame) with the fog light switch on it should read 12v+