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Check in the under hood fuse block or power distribution center for fuse #72 and #75 these are 60 amp fuses. If the problem isn't there you have Two separate problems, check at the switches for battery voltage and ground. The most common problem is switches.
Interior fuse box. It is a circuit breaker, not a fuse, #28, according to your owners manual. Not only check the circuit breaker, use a test lite and check for voltage on circuit breaker circuits. Sometimes, if faulty window motor, it may cause the circuit breaker to trip. I've seen some circuit breakers that were hot to the touch. After it cools off, it may reset?
First check the power window fuse and relay.
The fuse is located in the underhood fuse box, it is maxi-fuse G (30A) {actually its' a 30A circuit breaker}. Make sure that power is getting to the circuit breaker using a testlight. Also check to see if power goes through the circuit breaker by checking its' other terminal while a partner operates (or attempts to) the power windows. If power goes in to the circuit breaker but does not come out, replace the circuit breaker. (some circuit breakers reset after a while, but I'm assuming you've have this problem for a while, so you're past the time it needs to reset)
If no power to the fuse panel for that fuse and circuit breaker, you may have a maxi-fuse burnt out in the power distribution box by or near the battery. Check all your fuses under the hood.
Well first of all you can check out the power from the house - Check to see whether there's power getting to the dryer. Is it plugged in? Check for blown fuses or tripped circuit breakers your dryer uses two fuses or circuit breakers. The dryer could tumble but not heat if only one of the two fuses is blown. If you have circuit breakers, one of the two circuit breakers can trip, even if the two for the dryer are connected. Then you can check the heating element -Often a dryer heating element burns out, but doesn't trip the circuit breaker or blow a fuse. The heating element is simply a long coil of special wire. You can check it for continuity with an ohm meter. No continuity means the element is bad and you need to replace it, electric heating elements are not repairable. Further you can check the thermal fuse - On many dryers, there's a thermal fuse mounted to the exhaust duct inside the back cover panel. The fuse which is about an inch long is usually embedded in black resin and mounted in a white plastic housing. If the fuse has blown, you need to replace it.
Hello there: There are a couple of things to check if the dryer does not heat properly There's no heatIf your dryer doesn't heat, check these:Power
from the houseHeating
elementThermal
fuseWiringPower from the houseCheck to see whether there's power getting to the
dryer. Is it plugged in? Check for blown fuses or tripped circuit
breakers--your dryer uses two fuses or circuit breakers. The dryer could
tumble but not heat if only one of the two fuses is blown. If you have
circuit breakers, one of the two circuit breakers can trip, even if the
two for the dryer are connected.Heating elementOften a dryer heating element burns out, but
doesn't trip the circuit breaker or blow a fuse. The heating element is
simply a long coil of special wire. You can check it for continuity with
an ohm meter. No continuity means the element is bad and you need to
replace it--electric heating elements aren't repairable.Thermal fuseOn many dryers, there's a thermal fuse mounted to
the exhaust duct inside the back cover panel. The fuse--which is about
an inch long--is usually embedded in black resin and mounted in a white
plastic housing. If the fuse has blown, you need to replace it. (You
can't re-set it.)
Power from the house Check to see whether there's power getting to the dryer. Is it plugged in? Check for blown fuses or tripped circuit breakers--your dryer uses two fuses or circuit breakers. The dryer could tumble but not heat if only one of the two fuses is blown. If you have circuit breakers, one of the two circuit breakers can trip, even if the two for the dryer are connected. Heating element Often a dryer heating element burns out, but doesn't trip the circuit breaker or blow a fuse. The heating element is simply a long coil of special wire. You can check it for continuity with an ohm meter. No continuity means the element is bad and you need to replace it--electric heating elements aren't repairable. Thermal fuse On many dryers, there's a thermal fuse mounted to the exhaust duct inside the back cover panel. The fuse--which is about an inch long--is usually embedded in black resin and mounted in a white plastic housing. If the fuse has blown, you need to replace it.
Check to see whether there's power getting to the dryer. Is it plugged in? Check for blown fuses or tripped circuit breakers your dryer uses two fuses or circuit breakers. The dryer could tumble but not heat if only one of the two fuses is blown. If you have circuit breakers, one of the two circuit breakers can trip, even if the two for the dryer are connected.
Often a dryer heating element burns out, but doesn't trip the circuit breaker or blow a fuse. The heating element is simply a long coil of special wire. You can check it for continuity with an ohm meter. No continuity means the element is bad and you need to replace it electric heating elements aren't repairable.
On many dryers, there's a thermal fuse mounted to the exhaust duct inside the back cover panel. The fuse which is about an inch long is usually embedded in black resin and mounted in a white plastic housing. If the fuse has blown, you need to replace it.
The only possible check that could be done without removing/opening the Audiovox TV would be to check for the presence/absence of supply power/voltage depending on how the TV is powered (12VDC or 120 VAC). Normally, there would be an fuse and/or circuit breakers.for the RV's entertainment system including the TV.
The 120-volt circuit breakers and 12-volt
fuses are located in the same compartment. These devices interrupt the power if
the circuit is overloaded.The 120-volt circuit breakers include a 30
amp main breaker and several smaller breakers for individual circuits. If a
circuit breaker is tripped, look for an overload on the circuit, then reset it
by turning the breaker OFF and then turning it ON. Do not try to reset a breaker
the second time without locating the overload problem. The 12-volt fuses protect
individual circuits. If the circuit is overloaded, it will blow the fuse and the
fuse must be replaced. Check the circuit for an overload and replace the fuse
with the same type or amperage rating.
If the above checks out, then problem is internal to the unit and would require removal from its current position.
Hope this be of initial help/idea. Pls post back how things turned up or should you need additional information.
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