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Not exactly sure with the eclipse most vehicles are inline with the heater hose, and on or near the firewall
Inline in one heater hose underhood near the HVAC box (right hand side underhood.)
You can but it will need to be a plastic or acrylic heater, inline heater, or have a heater guard over it, otherwise it may melt the acrylic. For smaller tanks small mini heaters are available that would work just fine. Check out www.bigalsonline.com they will have what you need.
Central heating, radiators, so-called Slant Fin or inline method.
The heater control valve (HCV) is a very important component to a vehicle's water cooling and climate control systems. The HCV itself for this application can be found inline to the heater core lines.
Kindly rephrase the question for more clarity. It looks like you want to use an electric 600 watt radiator heater. Please, DO NOT ATTEMPT THIS DUMB STUNT. How much do you value your life or that of your family. I hope you have very good insurance coverage. Electricity and water do not mix well. The use of a bubble solar blanket would be far less costly in terms of lives lost. Ken Disregard Ken's answer above. No, an inline radiator heater is a 120 volt device, designed to heat about 3 gallons of coolent. A 4,400 gallon pool would not be effected much at all by a radiator heater. You need a pool heater designed for that purpose.
Is it an electrical cord that looks like it would plug into a standard AC outlet? If so, it's probably involved in keeping the car warm in cold weather. It could be a block heater, a battery heater or an oil dipstick heater. Some block heaters are mounted inline in one of the radiator hoses. When plugged in, it heats and circulates the coolant through the block. The battery heaters are essentially a small heating pad that sits beneath the battery.
the block heater takes the place of your freeze plug, in this case you would need to locate and remove the correct freeze plug and replace it with the block heater plug, plug in the cord and route to appropriate location, done
Arrow on filter toward furnace or inline with air flow.
I would check any fuses/relays related to the heater or blower motor. If the heater fan doesn't work, could be a bad heater blower motor resistor(if has one) which are usually inline in the ductwork or out next to the heater blower motor under the hood. If the fan does work w/no heat then could possibly be a bad thermostat(stuck open) or control head.
Either the electrical flow between the battery and the switch is faulty or the connection between the switch and the blower is faulty. Could be an inline fuse.
No, it is an inline engine.No, it is an inline engine.