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[HOW-TO][HVAC][Gen III Dakota][Gen I Durango] Blower Resistor Diagnosis/Replacement

266844 Views 139 Replies 83 Participants Last post by  Hempshaw
7
Since this question, or variations of it, comes up quite often I thought I’d write a thorough how-to which can be linked to or (hopefully) found in a search.


SYMPTOM:

Your heating & air conditioner blower motor suddenly stops working, only works on certain speeds, or just seems to not blow as hard as it used to.

Applies to (as far as I know):
2001 – 2007 Durango
2001 – 2004 Dakota


SOLUTION:

99.9% of the time your blower motor resistor block has gone bad. The resistor block is part of the ground path of the blower motor circuit, which in conjunction with the fan speed selector switch controls the speed of the fan by varying the amount of resistors in the electrical path (more resistors = slower speed, fewer resistors = higher speed). This is an easy fix and the new part costs less than $20. If you’re like me and would like to know for sure, read ahead to the “Troubleshooting” section. If you want to play the percentages and just go ahead and change it, skip ahead to the “Removal & Replacement” section.


TROUBLESHOOTING:

In order to troubleshoot the resistor block it will be easiest if it is removed from the truck (see Removal and Installation in post #2). Use the following diagram for this procedure.



Pin 2 at the top left goes to the motor, 1, 3, 4, & 5 go to the switch. What happens is a positive source is routed through a fuse and the ignition switch straight to the motor. The ground for the motor is routed through the fan speed selector switch and in turn the resistor block. When you rotate your switch, you are actually controlling the routing of the motor ground through this resistor block. Notice how if the ground goes through pin 5 then out pin 2 it has to pass through 3 resistors? That would be your low speed. See how there is a direct path between pins 1 and 2? That is your high speed. More resistors, lower speed.

If you look closely at the plug, you can read the pin numbers. Older styles may not have these numbers, so use the following picture:



With the connector tab at the top, pin 1 is on the left, pin 5 on the right.

It may also be on the vehicle side of the plug:



Measure from the following points (you should see approximately the following readings).

pin 2 to pin 1 = 0.2 ohms (very little resistance)
pin 2 to pin 3 = 0.7 ohms (some resistance)
pin 2 to pin 4 = 1.3 ohms (more resistance)
pin 2 to pin 5 = 2.4 ohms (most resistance)

If any of those combinations have no continuity, something is wrong with the resistor block. If all those resistance readings are correct, or you just love troubleshooting, you can do the following two steps by disconnecting the blower motor plug. (Here is what you’re looking for, follow the black and green wires around towards the front of the truck to find the motor plug)



1. Disconnect the blower motor plug (seen disconnected in the following picture, for this step you want the plug indicated by the blue arrow) and connect a wire between pin 2 and ground, then between pin 1 and a 12v source (fuse block, battery, etc…). This will verify the blower motor functions correctly. Notice in the picture the plug is held up by two friction tabs, you can pull down and release those tabs for easier access.



2. Using the following diagrams, and with the blower motor plug disconnected, connect one lead of your meter to pin 1 of the vehicle side of the plug (Red arrow), then the other meter lead to a suitable ground. Verify the resistor block is plugged in to the vehicle harness. Rotate the fan speed selector switch through all the positions and watch the resistance change on the meter (should be similar readings as above). This will verify your speed selector switch and all the wiring has proper continuity. If any resistance reading seems incorrect, and you have already separately checked the resistor block, continue to troubleshoot the speed selector switch and the electrical connectors themselves.






Continued in post #2
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Blower Not Working

Just want to say THANK-YOU!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! for a great write-up on having a problem with a Blower. After a little looking and trouble-shooting, I decided to take the easy way and bought a new resistor bank and it did the trick. :banana2:
going to do this in another month or so. truck is in the garage for the winter anyway, so not having any heat is no big deal.
Awesome write-up, you saved my ass tonight:bow:.....blower motor resistor died in -27° C (-17° F) in a home depot parking lot.

After a cold ass drive with fogged up windows to my local parts store and $24 (everything costs more in Canada) later I have heat again!!!!:banana2:

+1 rep for you

The new green resistor I bought is made by Standard Motor Products (part #RU380). The dead one is the stock all black one. My wiring harness was not melted or charred at all.

I would recommend anyone who lives somewhere cold to at least check if they still have the old black style (it only takes 10 minutes) and replace it with a green if they do so they don't get stuck without heat.
i had to do this not too long ago... but on my Gen II the resistor block is easily accessible on the firewall under the hood. i found that strange. and it kinda pissed me off after i ripped half my dash out looking for it...

nice write up though :mullet:
i need heat !
so i looked under my dash on my 99 r/t and it's a different set up to the one pictured, hence why under applications it says 2001-2004 daks. so where is the blower motor on a 99?
I replaced the resistor pack on my Durango just yesterday. What a PITA it is laying on your back without much room to work in. At least it's not buried under the dash requiring a major excavation. The good news is when it dies on my QC I'll be able to change it out in much less time...
My resistor died again yesterday for the third time.

I think I will replace the blower this time too...
can this part be bought at the local parts store, or a dealer only part ?
can this part be bought at the local parts store, or a dealer only part ?
Dakota blower resistor

Blower motor resistor at Autozone
^^ Not a problem, there's been countless questions answered for me on this forum so I try to help if I can
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so i looked under my dash on my 99 r/t and it's a different set up to the one pictured, hence why under applications it says 2001-2004 daks. so where is the blower motor on a 99?
:huh:


I don't know if this helps or not, but it's all could find.
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i appreciate the help man.
blower motor under center of the dash and resistor is on firewall plenum under right side of windshield
For those with melted connectors- If you don't want to replace the connector you can always do what I did. One of mine was melted and the wire was shot so I cut the bad part of the wire off, cleaned the melted part as much as I could and shoved the wire back into it, bending down the little tabs on the metal part in the connector onto the wire. Then I loaded it up with Goop to hold it in place. I fixed the problem the guy before me obviously avoided (new blower motor and resistor) and did this about 2 weeks ago with no problems at all.
thanks

i see it has been awhile from the last post but im glad i found it and that other post r linked to it if u still check it out great directions have an os durango that blower just quit in and your post took me in the right direction couldnt find a wiring diagram to know exactly how it worked but your post cleared it all up thaks again also how r u on 4.7 idle problems if u dont mind check my post out in yhe 4.7 section thanks again for the blower post
For those with melted connectors- If you don't want to replace the connector you can always do what I did. One of mine was melted and the wire was shot so I cut the bad part of the wire off, cleaned the melted part as much as I could and shoved the wire back into it, bending down the little tabs on the metal part in the connector onto the wire. Then I loaded it up with Goop to hold it in place. I fixed the problem the guy before me obviously avoided (new blower motor and resistor) and did this about 2 weeks ago with no problems at all.
Mine was so melted together, the plug wouldn't come apart from the resistor. I had to actually break a ton of plastic to get the resistor off, just to see if I could salvage the plug. Then the plastic was melted to the inside where those prongs are, so there was no way to get it out. Damn thing.
Great write up. Bought my $7 part from the Stealership, put it in.... Worked!!! Sadly, 3 days later the wife called bitching the blower stopped again. One prong looked a little burned, but seemed ok. It did work, for a bit anyways. I'm sweating this one... I hope it's simple. No junkyard I have found locally has it and carparts.com are $75 a plug!!! Yikes
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