Was asking
@Dejure specifically, what he meant by the intermittent game. GM headlights will go on and off if there is a short or excessive resistance between the headlight switch and the headlights. They are designed that way intentionally. Again
@Dejure what do you mean the intermittent game,what symptoms do your lights have.
I worked in electronics for the feds, as a civilian working for the Navy, a bunch of years back. One of the things we dreaded the most was, intermittent problems - there one moment and not the next. The U.S. Navy has lost millions to guys like me having to chase down those kinds of problems.
A month or so back, I swapped out the headlight switch because the ceramic holding the dimmer wire was broke and it, otherwise, had issues. Now, a month or two later, I was having problems again. I pulled the headlight switch out and there were no lights. Because I have part of the dash off for other reasons, accessing the headlight switch takes about fifteen seconds. I took advantage of that to insure the connector was making contact all the way around (had that problem once). No effect. Did the wiggle thing here, there and elsewhere. No effect. Grounds are all good, because I took care of them not long back, and they show good on a meter.
On a whim, completely pulled the switch and took it into the shop. IT WAS INTERMITTENT. Not a common thing, but it happens.
To be honest, the switch never felt quite right from the day I got it. Played with the switch knob (on and off, out. . . .) and, when it read on again at the lamps, via the 12v input, I plugged it back in. Lights came on. Grudgingly, I bit the bullet and bough another switch. The problem has not resurfaced.
The NEW new switch feels different than the old new switch. The knob rod slides in and out smoother, and when you press the release button (after pulling all the way out and a bit back in), actually works smoothly to release the knob rod. And it does so without cocking at a slightly weird angle. Who knows, a bit of broken plastic inside here or there. . . (not committed to dissecting it quite yet, though I've done it to switches that went south in the past, just because of curiosity. Don't remember if they went back together smoothly or not. it's been forty or so years).