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The EPS fuse is for the electric power steering. The EPS fuse is usually a 60 amp fuse. It may be a safety kill switch associated with not having a fuse in place. It is not usually safe to drive a car without the steering working properly. GM has had a huge recall on the EPS system, including some 2009 models.
there is a fuse on most cars that protects a circuit from over load. when you turn the ignition key power is supplied to the fuel pump relay that closes a set of contacts that sends power to the fuel pump, the computer switches the power off after a few seconds if the motor does not start, if the motor starts the computer uses the oil sender unit to complete the circuit as a safety measure to stop the pump if the engine stops.
First, remove the cigar lighters ans see if the noise stops.
Second, remove fuses one at a time to locate which fuse is associated with the noise.
Third, if that does not help, post the make, model, and year of the car so we can help you more.
Any fuse that is blown may stop it from starting, or no fuse at all if it's something else. Visually inspect the fuses to make sure there is a link. If all the links are good then you need to start looking at other things like fuel pump, timing belt, etc.
On the passenger side of the dash thereis a fuse block. Find the HVAC blower fuse. Start the car, turn on the blower, and check for power at that fuse. If power disappears when the blower stops than you have a bad ignition switch.
IGNition fuse, ECM fuse, FUEL pump fuse, or whatever the equivalents are in your vehicle. For fuse rating, if the number is not printed right next to the fuse holder, check your owner's manual.
yes! there are several fuses that could keep a car from starting. depending on the symptom your having depends on the fuse to look at. if it cranks but no start look for a fuel related fuse or relay. if it doesnt even crank over than look for your main fuse or possibly a ecm or pcm fuse. would need a little more detail on what exactly the car is doing
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