12-13-2005, 03:26 PM
Recently I was cleaning out leaves under the windshield cowl and happened across a bracket with two round ceramic-looking discs fastened to it. These are ballast resistors, and from perusing the wiring diagrams, it appears they are part of the circuit for the cooling fans.
I think resistors are used with fans to allow them to run at more than one speed. To produce lower speeds, a resistor "burns off" some of the voltage so that less makes it to the fans and they turn slower. I think the climate control fan has one or more resistors that are used to deliver the 1 - 3 speed settings (where 4 is the max speed that takes full voltage).
So, in this application, why are there two of these things? I think in past posts people have said that there's a half-speed mode for fan #1. But doesn't fan #2 run only at full speed when the A/C's on, or temperature reaches a certain level? Do the two resistors relate to just fan #1, or to both fans?
Is there a failure mode for a ballast resistor short of the fan just not turning? For example, could you lose the half-speed mode but retain full-speed if a resistor wore out?
I think resistors are used with fans to allow them to run at more than one speed. To produce lower speeds, a resistor "burns off" some of the voltage so that less makes it to the fans and they turn slower. I think the climate control fan has one or more resistors that are used to deliver the 1 - 3 speed settings (where 4 is the max speed that takes full voltage).
So, in this application, why are there two of these things? I think in past posts people have said that there's a half-speed mode for fan #1. But doesn't fan #2 run only at full speed when the A/C's on, or temperature reaches a certain level? Do the two resistors relate to just fan #1, or to both fans?
Is there a failure mode for a ballast resistor short of the fan just not turning? For example, could you lose the half-speed mode but retain full-speed if a resistor wore out?

