2003 Chrysler Town and Country Van came in with the complaint of the blower operates on high speed with key on and cannot be adjusted down. This procedure will also apply to Dodge Caravans with auto a/c. The controls and indicators seemed to work normally. I checked the wiring diagram and component locator and found that the blower power module is located behind the glove box. Good place to start.
After opening the glove box there are two stops the have to be depressed inward in order to drop the box down.
The blower power module is directly behind the lowered glove box. It is held in place by two 8mm hex head screws.
After removing the two attaching screws, the blower power module can be positioned for testing.
Turn the key on and while manually rotating the blower switch from low to high you should see a voltage change between about 2 volts (high)up to about 10 volts (low) on the blue/light blue wire. It is the middle wire in the left connector pictured below. Because the blower was working on high speed there was no need to do any other testing, however if you were to have low blower or no blower you would need to test further. Check for 12 volts – on the black/orange wire and 12 volts+ on the dark blue wire in the three wire connector. If either is missing check respective fuse and ground connections. Next check for 12 volts between the blue wire and the dark blue /yellow (sometimes black as pictured below) wire in the two wire connector to the right of the pictures. If either signal is missing in the two wire connector and the three wire connector tested good then the power module is faulty. If 12 volts power and ground are present then the blower motor is faulty. Usually bumping the motor with the key on and the blower switch on high will make the motor work for a little while because it will reset the worn brushes.
Three wire connector:
Black/Orange wire should have a constant ground.
Dark Blue wire should have 12 volt switched power from the front blower relay. The front blower relay is located in the Integrated Power Module (underhood fuse box).
Blue/Light Blue wire should have a varying voltage from about 2 volts(high blower command) and a nominal 10 volts(low blower command).
Two wire connector:
Check for a nominal battery voltage reading across the two wires. Key on and blower set to high.
I removed the mounting screws to gain better access to the wiring for testing.
Be careful to keep the aluminum cooling fins away from the metal brace for the glove box. It will complete the ground circuit for the blower motor and will scare you when it sparks.
Place an insulating cloth between the aluminum fins and the brace if you want.
A good look at the blower power module.
Installed the new blower power module and all is well.
Hi Sparky. Good site, but I’m struggling with this one.
My front blower stopped. Not good this time of year in Michigan. I have a 2001 TC with the climate control settings.
I tried fuse swapping as the back blower does work, same results, no front, back works.
Hadn’t found your site yet but found enough to indicate it might be the power module. Grabbed one and swapped it out… and nothing.
I don’t have any instruments to test voltage, but I’m thinking my swap of that part eliminated that. What’s left then? The blower motor itself I think, but I’m struggling to find where that is or how to investigate.
Any tips or suggestions? Does anyone have a simple diagram? I found the power module info easy enough, but the blower motor is more elusive prey!
Sparky,
The module when it is in the car is mounted so the 2 wire plug is on the right.
Starting from the right side the first terminal is t1. The other terminal in the 2 terminal area is t2. The next terminal working left is t3. Then still going left t4 & t5 in that order. T1 far right t5 far left
Thanks again for the help . A donation will soon follow!
George
I am sure this will help someone else. Any chance you can correspond the t1-t5 designations to wire colors or orientations?
Sparky,
Some info for you. I tested the newest part(Town & Country van blower control module behind glove compartment). I hope this helps in the future.
Numbering the terminals like this:
t1 t2 / t3 t4 t5
ohm readings between terminals
good part space bad part
t1-t2 188ohm / 44 ohm
t1-t3 184 ohm / 40 ohm
t1-t4 184 ohm / 40 ohm
t1-t5 134 ohm / 1 ohm
t2-t4 4.5 ohm / 44 ohm
This is for a Standard RU 399 (good part) and the equivalent Dorman part # (bad part).
The fan is now working fine. The speed is controlable.
Thanks for your help and patience!!!
George
Just for the fun of it, try connecting the cut wire that is still attached to the blower speed controller to a known good ground and see what happens. Also confirm that there is nothing coming in contact with the aluminum fins on the controller.