sounds like you lost an alternator belt
cause the bulbs are burned out? cause the fuse is blown? jeez....
No, a fuse cannot cause a battery to not hold a charge. However a dead cell in the battery will cause it to run down overnight. Also there may be something on that is drawing power from the battery. Under-hood light, trunk light, dome light, glove box light, etc. Also a stuck relay will drain the battery.
battery fuse is burned out, its in the fuse box inside engine compartment.
bulb gone? fuse burned? battery dead?
There is a fuse located behind the battery. You will have to remove a plastic shield that runs behind the battery first. You will then find a round fuse holder with a single fuse in it. Check and replace if burned out , this is the most likely cause.
A light bulb or a fuse.
There are several things that can make your headlights not work. First the might have blown a fuse, or maybe the bulbs burned out, or the battery might have died.
To fix a burned wire that is plugged in at the fuse box under the Battery sign, the wire will have to be removed and a new one soldered in place. Before doing this, find the cause or overload that caused this wire to burn in the first place. It could be that a fuse of too high an Amp was placed in the fuse box by mistake.
Well, both the wipers and the blower could have a burned out fuse. Of course, they both could have a burned out motor. I would run a hot wire from the battery to the wipers and the blower motor. If they worked, I'd be looking for a fuse or bad switch.
It could be a dome light. To find out what is draining the battery overnight you need to take off the negative battery terminal and put a test light or Voltage tester between the 2 terminals. With everything off and all the doors shut or open if you have the dome light turned off, the test light or voltage tester will light up or show voltage. Go to the fuse block and take a fuse out one by one. If the light goes out when you pull a particular fuse, then that is the circuit that is draining the battery and you can take a closer look at it.
The blower motor speed switch is burned out or the fuse is blown.
Bad wireing, bad grounding, incorrect battery, or system overload as in using your stereo and lighter at the same time also (audio systems)