It's not a fuse problem. The fan switch uses resistors to maintain the slower fan speeds and this resistor has gone bad or is broken. You'll probably need a new resistor and have it replaced.
2006-09-12 03:11:33
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answer #1
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answered by pvreditor 7
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Mine did that too - its the blower motor under the dash -the part is like 30 bucks plus instaltion - it took 20 minutes to fix...has nothing to do with the fuses - if it was a fuse it wouldnt work at all
2006-09-12 10:17:04
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answer #2
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answered by ice_princess 3
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I,m going to weigh in with the others that say the blower motor resistor is bad. When you have only the high blower speed it almost always turns out to be the resistor. All the resistor does is reduce current flow to the blower motor to give you different fan speeds and when it goes bad then you are left with high speed only.
2006-09-12 10:55:31
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answer #3
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answered by Iknowthisone 7
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If the blower only works on high, then you need to change the blower resistor located underdash on passenger side. Part normally runs 20-30 bucks.
2006-09-12 10:07:08
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answer #4
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answered by mtbman1016 2
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You blower motor resistor is shot. It's located under the dash. You can buy a replacement at any auto parts store.
2006-09-12 10:10:09
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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what mtbman said ... but look in a service manual for its location, most gm products like that are located on the passenger firewall under the hood ... (the portion right below your windshield)
2006-09-12 10:10:46
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answer #6
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answered by Zenas Walter 3
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Very common problem for many cars of all makes. It's the resistor.
2006-09-12 14:18:46
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answer #7
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answered by MrZ 6
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you are getting good info. i had this same problem on a 2002 Pontiac grand prix. get the resistor
2006-09-12 10:17:07
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answer #8
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answered by injection_od 3
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