B104C–BLEND DOOR CONTROL CIRCUIT/PERFORMANCE (ATC)
For a complete wiring diagram Refer to Section 8W.
•
When Monitored:
With the ignition on.
•
Set Condition:
If the A/C Heater Control detects an excessive current draw on the (C61) Front Blend Door Driver circuit, the
(C32) Recirculation Door Driver circuit, or the (C34) Common Door Driver 1 circuit while attempting to drive
this actuator. This DTC has a maturing time of 5 seconds and a de-maturing time of 10 seconds. If the DTC’s
status changes from active to stored it will stay in memory for 100 ignition cycles.
Possible Causes
DOOR DRIVER CIRCUIT(S) SHORTED
Theory of Operation
The A/C Heater Control monitors the door driver circuits during actuator operation for shorts to ground, shorts to
battery, and shorts to other door driver circuits. If detected, the A/C Heater Control reports these types of faults as
Control Circuit/Performance DTCs. It is important to note that Control Circuit/Performance DTCs do not indicate
where or what type of short is present and that additional system testing is necessary to provide more details about
the reported fault.
NOTE: The DTC must be active for the results of this test to be valid. Do not perform this test if the DTC is
stored. Refer to HVAC System Test (ATC) for stored DTC test procedures.
Diagnostic Test
1.
RUN THE ACTUATOR DTC DETECTION TEST
With the scan tool, erase HVAC DTCs.
Turn the ignition off, wait 10 seconds, and then turn the ignition on.
With the scan tool, select System Tests and then select Actuator DTC Detection. When the test is complete, select
View DTCs.
Repair
Diagnose and repair the DTC(s). If multiple DTCs are present, beginning with the common circuits, diag-
nose and repair all short high DTCs and then all short low DTCs. Refer to the Table of Contents in this
Section for a complete list of all HVAC related symptoms.
HB
HVAC - ELECTRICAL DIAGNOSTICS
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