a volt meter can read voltage where there's practically none since they are designed to add no load to the circuit while testing very low load circuits. it can easily be reading a pull up resist on the circuit board in the bcm. or some other phantom voltage. but if you used say a test light that has to light a bulb you'd see nothing. you're probably seeing how the internal circuit is designed so that it sees the ground signal.
the quick and dirty test would be ground the pin at the bcm for hood closed and see if the dash warning goes away.
I haven't looked at this wiring diagram, but looking at mine that might be a little different. they wired the switch so that it knows if the hood is open, closed of if the switch is bad. that's why it's not a single one wire open/closed switch
the quick and dirty test would be ground the pin at the bcm for hood closed and see if the dash warning goes away.
I haven't looked at this wiring diagram, but looking at mine that might be a little different. they wired the switch so that it knows if the hood is open, closed of if the switch is bad. that's why it's not a single one wire open/closed switch