The fuse is in the passenger side kick panel, in the fuse box with the rest of the fuses. It is fuse #12 and is partially hidden by the kick panel. Is is on the edge of the fuse box towards the door. The diagram for the fuses is on the inside of the fuse box cover you remove to get to the fuses. The same fuse also supplies power to the heater control panel, so unless your heater control panel is dark the fuse is not blown. There are also relays that control the seat heaters--one under each seat located on top of the upper seat frame rail.
My seat heater stopped working. Is there a fuse for this? I can not find anything in my owners manual about the seat heater.
i have the same problem i think it has to do with the fuse box in rear seat. the whole driver door doesnt work . only the light and speaker, but i can do anythin except in passenger . i exchanged the modules ,now im goin to check the fuses in the back seat i have the same problem i think it has to do with the fuse box in rear seat. the whole driver door doesnt work . only the light and speaker, but i can do anythin except in passenger . i exchanged the modules ,now im goin to check the fuses in the back seat
What heat r u referring to, is it the seat heater. If it is, turn off the seat heater
IT turns the heater on and off!
under the seat
should be under seat
Under the seat by the battery .
Hi the fuses for the heated seats is uderneath the rear seat once you lift up the seat you will see the fuse fox
Toyota has issued a technical service bulletin for seat heater replacement. It seems that this is not an uncommon problem. The seat heater has been redesigned. You can find the bulletin here: http://ww2.justanswer.com/uploads/jarrid191/2008-10-20_123630_T-EL002-06.pdf or search on "toyota sienna seat heater problem"
If the seat heater shuts itself off after you hit the button, chances are there is damaged wiring in the seat bottom heater pad. Search online for "Denali seat heater replacement" and you will find the parts you need. It requires removing the leather seat cover, unplugging and removing the old heating pad, and laying on the new one (it is like a giant sticker). Alternatively you can just stick the new heater pad on top of the old one. Then plug the NEW heater pad in, reinstall the seat cover, and enjoy a warm butt.
I have not tried to install a seat heater. Assuming that you have a seat with heater that you wish to use, Subaru tends to not include the wiring unless that option was ordered from the factory. You will need to install all wiring up to the fuse panel.