Ballasts are not used with motor control.
I had to pull off the front bumper to replace the ballast and high and low beam bulbs. that's the only way that I know. I had to do this 2 times when the other bulb went out.If the bulb you replace does not work then it might be the ballast.
if you remove the glovebox and the passenger underside of dashboard you will see it near fan
replace blower resistor
Electrical contacts in the first 2 positions have become either corroded or burned. Replace fan speed control switch.
short in wire or fuse bad connection on the switchAnswerYou have a defective heater resistor pack. Replace it.
3 ballast, 2 sand, 1 cement.
The fan speed is really dependent on the size of the heatsink. A large heatsink can use a slower fan, while a smaller one will need a much faster fan.
times by 2
More information would be needed to diagnose your problem more accurately, but here are some tips to start: 1) Fans will not work with dimmers. If you have a dimmer controlling your fan, it will only work when the dimmer in is the full intensity position (if at all). You will need to replace the dimmer with a fan speed control. If one switch controls both the fan and the light, this will not solve your problem, as a light will not work with a fan speed control switch. You will have to settle with a standard single pole switch, a remote switch, or get one more wire between the switch and the fan. 2) If you have a fan speed control switch, but the fan doesn't seem to respond as it should, you may want to pull on the pullchain directly on the fan. If the pullchain is not set to high, your speed control will not work correctly. 3) If #2 or #3 don't apply to you, and you are simply using the pull chain on the fan, you may have a bad switch inside the fan housing, loose or disconnected wires to the fan (unlikely), or simply a bad fan motor.
Control circuit malfunction Fan speed 2 So. bad relay in fan speed two Broken wire, short or bad conection in the wiring for fan speed two including the ground side.
Could be switch Could be low speed relay Could be low speed winding on fan motor Could be fan motor resistor Uses 2 relays (one for High speed and other for lower speeds Motor has 2 windings one for High speed and otheer for lower speeds
Turn the fan speed selector to the "2" position, then pull firmly. The bulb is located on the stem of the selector knob and you'll see it when you remove the knob.