On Tue, 29 Nov 2005 14:09:16 -0500, "baqi" <baqicherry (AT) yahoo (DOT) com>
wrote:
Quote:
I have a 1993 Corolla and I am having problems with the heat on the inside
of the car. The radiator seems fine, there appears to be no leak and the
hoses don't seem tight. I was thinking that it may be the thermostat but
that did not solve the problem. Does anyone know anything else I can check
before I take it to the dealer? |
All simple stuff! Check to see if the heater valve is letting hot
water through the heater core - do the heater hoses get hot?
Does the heater blower fan run? Try all the speed settings, if the
speed control resistor pack has burned out (cheap part at the dealer)
High speed will be all you have. This can also be a blown fuse, worn
out fan motor, bad switch in the heater control cluster.
A known fault in some models is a bad solder joint to the switch in
the heater control cluster. If you can get the fan to come on for a
few seconds by wiggling the switch, that's the problem - pop the
control cluster out and get a soldering iron.
Do the damper doors switch to the right positions to send heat out
the floor ducts? On most Toyotas they are cable operated, others have
vacuum motors or electric motors. Grab a flashlight, lay on your back
in the passenger-side doorway and stick your head in the passenger
footwell as someone operates the control levers, you'll see and hear
the damper doors operating.
--<< Bruce >>--
--
Bruce L. Bergman, Woodland Hills (Los Angeles) CA - Desktop
Electrician for Westend Electric - CA726700
5737 Kanan Rd. #359, Agoura CA 91301 (818) 889-9545
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