As Dick experienced, I think the reason for this happening is almost universally a bad ground connection. I too just had one of my lights go out completely on one side (tail, brake, and signal).
I removed the fixture from the TM, and immediately found the problem. There were thin metal strips on the back of the fixture that were attached to the socket and pressed up against the TM to provide a ground. A lazy way to do it, IMHO, given the pain/crystal coating on the TM. Anyway, they had rusted out, so there was no ground.
The easiest way to fix the problem would be to replace the entire fixture, since they are so cheap ($5?) and the plastic gets brittle with time as well. However, I was about to leave for a trip, so I had no time to wait for delivery of a new fixture. So I just made 2 jumper wires a few inches long with small screw lugs on each end to replace the connectivity of the rusted out strips. One lug pressed directly up against the TM skin (after cleaning the skin), and the other pressed up directly against another piece of metal that was connected to the socket on the outside of the fixture. All lugs were attached with screws in existing holes.
Fixed the problem. I'd check there first. You'll need some caulking to reseal the fixture to the TM when you reinstall.
Dave
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2000 2720SL & 2007 3124KB
2005 Toyota Sequoia
Twin Battle Born 12v 100Ah LiFePO4 (BBGC2) batteries, 300W solar on rear shell, Link 10, Lift kit, Maxxis 8008 225 75/R15 E tires
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