remember that these vehicles are designed for manufacturing, not repair. For those of you that try your best to work with it you have my respect. and as Derek said, good luck!
Blower motor wouldn't shut off in my 2014 nissan sentra. I thought for sure it was a bad resistor. Spent 6 hours getting to the damn thing and replacing it. What a horrible design. It didn't fix it. In the end, it was a bad climate control model on the dash. Found one at a junkyard for 31 bucks and fixed it. Had i replaced it frim the start it would have taken me 20 minutes tops.
I, too, was looking for a video on this. After reading posts online, I said to myself, “surely you shouldn’t have to remove ALL of those pieces”. That is quite the task. Though I’m not even 100% the resistor is my issue. Hopefully, it’s something else!
remember that these vehicles are designed for manufacturing, not repair. For those of you that try your best to work with it you have my respect. and as Derek said, good luck!
How did you get it out when it was unmounted?
starting to feel like the puss* wasnt worth it
Non mechanic here. I got 2019 . Same location. Thank you.
what model 2019 sentra you got i got the feeling mines is in the same spot
Blower motor wouldn't shut off in my 2014 nissan sentra. I thought for sure it was a bad resistor. Spent 6 hours getting to the damn thing and replacing it. What a horrible design. It didn't fix it. In the end, it was a bad climate control model on the dash. Found one at a junkyard for 31 bucks and fixed it. Had i replaced it frim the start it would have taken me 20 minutes tops.
Where is that located
@@slams777 it's the knobs that control the temperature and fan on the dash. That whole module can be replaced pretty easily if that's your problem.
😂😂 I’m also looking for the resistor on a 2017 Altima.
I, too, was looking for a video on this. After reading posts online, I said to myself, “surely you shouldn’t have to remove ALL of those pieces”. That is quite the task. Though I’m not even 100% the resistor is my issue. Hopefully, it’s something else!