Plz help with my car!?
thanks
Answers:
Do not know what make and model car you have, but is most likely a blown fuse. check you owners manual for location and replace with the correct size as recommended by the mfg. If blows again right away, then must be short in the circuit that is causing the high amp. drain. This must be found before you can really fix the problem
Check your fuses
Could it be one or more of the fuses? Have a look in the manual. It doesn't sound like individual bulbs or anything.
Look in your fuse box
fuse
you culd have a blockage in your pipes or there could be a faulty wire get it cheked at a garage
dunno
sounds like you have a broken flux capacitor. get it fixed asap, or sometime in the back to the future!
almost definately a fuse. in your manual it should tell you what is on which fuse. simply pull it out and check if its burnt out.
Fuses stoped working
Sounds like a blown fuse, easy enough to repair.
Check the fuse diagram in the manual for the car, find the fuse(s) that correspond to the non working parts and replace them.
If that doesn't work, you need a mechanic!!
Somewhere in your car one or more of its electrical components, or the wiring connecting them together, has developed a 'short circuit' - possibly a burnt out (overloaded) washer/wiper motor, or a bare positive wire contacting the body or chassis.
A fuse (short for 'fusible link') is used by the manufacturer - usually in groups - to protect the car's various electrical systems and components: they are designed to fail when they are asked to carry too much electrical current - usually when a component such a washer/wiper motor is overloaded (too much snow and ice, or mud, maybe), or just becomes worn out and short-circuits internally.
Finding a burnt (or 'blown') fuse, of itself, does not tell you very much more than you already know - one or more of the car's components is not working. NEVER be tempted to fit a larger capacity fuse to replace a burnt one: you could cause an elecrical fire and destroy the car, and maybe you with it!
This is a job a garage or an auto electrician, with experience and equipment.
Most such problems are very simple, but I have known some cases - which looked like a 'simple blown fuse' at first - which took a week to locate and a complete new wiring loom to fix. One in my own car took three days to find, but was fixed for free with nothing more complicated than some insulating tape: a mechanic had fitted a new baby seat with a long bolt which cut through the insulation on the power wire leading to the rear washer/wiper, and short-circuited it to the bodyshelll.
sounds like a short any burnt wires probably blown fuses but you need to figure out why
Check your fuses would be anyone's first guess. Then go on to trouble shoot further if it still doesnt work.
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