Author Topic: Blower motor blows the fuse  (Read 3286 times)

dpreston Virginia

  • Full Member
  • Silver
  • ****
  • USA, VA, Salem
  • Posts: 275
Blower motor blows the fuse
« on: October 29, 2013, 16:19:50 »
I am looking for a little electrical advice from our esteemed group. The fuse blows to the (heater) blower when the car is running. The blower motor fuse does not blow unless the car is started. What should I check to try and run down this problem. Have correct fuse and have replacde around 4 times so far. At first it was spiratic now it blows every time the cars is running and I turn the fan on. I do not have A/C.
Thanks for any advice!
David
190SL 1960 Sold
280SL 1969
280SE 1969 cabriolet
Vette 67
Porsche 912 67

mdsalemi

  • Pagoda SL Board
  • Platinum
  • ******
  • USA, NC, Davidson
  • Posts: 7055
Re: Blower motor blows the fuse
« Reply #1 on: October 30, 2013, 11:48:29 »
David,

Assuming that your car is wired correctly, meaning that no additional load points have been placed on the circuit (the part downstream from your fuse) AND
all or most connections to that circuit are clean (dirty contacts including the fusing point draw a greater load) AND
the integrity to the wired points on the circuit is intact (corroded or damaged wiring will draw a greater load) THEN

...the thing to check (sorry for the bad news here) is your blower motor.

DC motors draw current in relation to the load on the motor shaft. So, it is possible you have something internal to the blower motor that is causing an additional physical load on the shaft; think a bad bearing or something worn out. Then, the motor is drawing more current than it is supposed to and the fuse blows.

It is possible to have your motor rebuilt once you get it out, (not a trivial task I'm afraid) but our vendor here, Bud's Benz has sourced suitable replacements. Part number is X248-011B @ $189.00

I should add that there are such things as "impedance protected" or current limiting motors which are typically used in electronic equipment cooling applications (think the fan on your PC) that do NOT draw additional current in relation to load, and can suffer a bad bearing w/o blowing a fuse. Alas, our blower motor is not in this category...

« Last Edit: October 31, 2013, 13:21:41 by mdsalemi »
Michael Salemi
Davidson, North Carolina (Charlotte Area) USA
1969 280SL (USA-Spec)
Signal Red 568G w/Black Leather (Restored)
2023 Ford Maverick Lariat Hybrid "Area 51"
2023 Ford Escape Hybrid
2024 Ford Mustang Mach Ex PEV