tunered Posted October 17, 2005 Share Posted October 17, 2005 1-2-3- is fine,took the resister out couldnt really see burnt place,is this the common cause? dont have a ohm meter. ed Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cougar Posted October 17, 2005 Share Posted October 17, 2005 On the high setting the resistors are not used. They only are in the circuit for the lower speeds. Since the blower works then this would leave only the switch position or the wiring to the blower as the possible problems. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tunered Posted October 17, 2005 Author Share Posted October 17, 2005 thanks glen,it worked only a few days ago,so im not sure whats going on.is there a fuse for high fan? ed Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kevinsUBARU Posted October 17, 2005 Share Posted October 17, 2005 I just went through this with a Ford Explorer. The resistor only allowed the blower to work on high, then the blower motor eventually crapped out from running full blast all the time. It was $286 to fix from the local garage. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cougar Posted October 17, 2005 Share Posted October 17, 2005 No, there isn't a seperate fuse for the high setting though after looking at my manual for an '88 model it shows fuses 1 and 2 supply power to the circuit (I never noticed that before). The print shows that the switch makes a ground connection to run the motor so you should be able to just ground the high switch position to check the switch and the motor. If that doesn't work, then the wire to the motor has a bad connection somewhere. thanks glen,it worked only a few days ago,so im not sure whats going on.is there a fuse for high fan? ed Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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