The 1958 Pontiac Bonneville convertible.
Yes, each of the front heated seats has it own fuse. Fuseblock is under the rear seat.
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Many, if not most, 2000-2005 Bonnevilles came with bucket seats and a console-mounted shifter. All LeSabres came with split bench seats and the shifter on the steering column. The only way you could swap a LeSabre front seat into a Bonneville would be if the Bonneville also had a split bench seat and shifter on the column. Assuming that is the case, the seats should bolt right in. The real wild card in the equation is the power seat controls. If the controls are mounted on the seats themselves, everything should plug in and work just fine. Where you might run into a problem is if one car has the seat controls mounted on the door and the other has them mounted on the seat. I'm pretty sure the LeSabre's seat controls are on the seat itself, but I'm not as sure about those on the Bonnevilles. The rear seats should be pretty much of a direct swap, but you may have different contours where the headrests meat the rear shelf.
In a 2005 Ford Explorer : Fuse ( # 11 ) is a 20 amp fuse for the heated seats ( in the passenger compartment fuse panel )
It depends whether or not your trailblazer came with heated seats, but if it did the switch would be on the door. The door switches should be (from front to back) Window Lock, Forward Window Controls, Passenger Window Controls, Door Lock, Seat Heaters.
Many toyota models offer heated seats
Yes. They were standard on the "Limited" and an option on the "SR-5". Controls are mounted on the right hand side of the console.
there are heated seats in my 2002 lxi
yes it does it actually haas heated and cooled seats!
Yes, a 2001 Buick Limited had heated seats available.
The top of the line EX model has heated seats on newer Accords.