At the risk of repeating myself: the mention of slow turn signals and apparent porblems might indicate that it's time to give ALL the grounds and connections a good scrubbing. Every electrical circuit begins with power applied and ends with a return to ground, so if that ground is corroded or loose it does the same thing as restricting current flow.
I'd polish out all the bulb sockets and contacts down inside [with power off of course], clean to bare metal on light receptacles and housings where they attach to body, and even run some auxiliary ground wires. On some of my trucks I run a ground jumper from radiator support to inner fender well, from inner fender well to firewall, and another from cab to bed, with the one to bed being 10 gauge. Along with the engine ground strap and the one down at the tranny your whole electrical system is then bonded once you clean all connections and light receptacles. Your alternator, regulator and battery will LUV you for it.
It's also fairly common to have the battery cables appear to be in good condition, when in fact they are entirely corroded underneath the plastic coating. I had to fix two stalled cars last winter [not mine] for that same problem. Also no harm in putting a dab of grease at electrical and ground connections to prevent oxidation. With winter coming any advantage you can get over the moisture and weather is worthwhile.
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