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There is not a fuse that controls the air to your vents in your 2000 Toyota. The vents are controlled by blending doors. The doors open and close to direct air to the desired location.
I believe the upper vents are for A/C only. The floor vents are for the Hot air. Test your ceiling controls by moving the knob from cold to hot, you should hear the air pass from upper vents to lower vents. Providing of course you have selected REAR from the front control panel.
push the a/c vents in on the top and remove the screws, you will have to look up in the vents to see them, remove the a/c knobs and the screws, pull a/c face plate off and remove four 10mm bolts hold the radio in the dash
gently pull them off. they are clipped in.
um...I know why no one has answered this yet, cos no one knows what the heck you are talking about!! Try rephrasing it!!!!!
yes
Found out this is a known issue at Toyota for 2004 through 2006 Sienna. (Technical Service Bulletin AC001-06). I never received a notice from Toyota about the issue and now am out of warranty (44K miles). The issue only shows up in cold weather so if you didn't catch it in the winter, you may have missed it. Just purchased the vehicle off lease earlier this summer. Called Toyota and there response was to bad, so sad, pay up! First foreign made car I have purchased, and will be the last.
where is the heater core in a 1992 Toyota previa
Doesn't matter what type of vehicle, this indicates an exhaust leak and an oil leak. The burnt oil and the exhaust, get pulled into the cowl which is where the air for the interior comes from! Not very healthy...
Undo the 2 screws at the bottom of the trim then pull the trim out by pulling on the heater vents at the top.
Just heater outlets for the rear area. If you were to remove the console assembly which hides the engine cover, you would see a duct running from the top to beneath the floor. It feeds the vents you mentioned.
Your front blower motor has gone out. There is a front and a rear blower motor.