benkoenig7
Clipper Climate Control Defective Connector
Summary of the thread
A 2006 Nissan Clipper experienced a climate control malfunction, with weak heating and non-functional AC. The suspected cause was a bad cable or plug. A similar issue in a different vehicle was resolved by addressing a corroded connector in the wiring harness. The solution involved replacing a defective connector at a workshop.
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4 comment(s)
benkoenig7 (community.author)
Thanks. Can you tell me which connectors you checked on your Volvo C30? Did any diagnostic trouble codes point you there, or was it just a visual inspection?
lauraschulz1
On my Volvo, it was the main connector block going into the climate control unit. No codes pointed to it; it was just eliminating possibilities. Given the age of our vehicles and the symptoms, I'd recommend a workshop visit. It might be more than just a visual check.
benkoenig7 (community.author)
Thanks for the advice. I took it to a workshop. It was a defective connector, which they replaced. The total cost was 95€.
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NISSAN
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CLIPPER
lauraschulz1
Interesting. My 2012 Volvo C30 had a similar problem where the whole climate control panel went haywire. I thought it was a bad temperature sensor or blower motor, but it was a corroded connector in the wiring harness. Have you checked the harness for damage or corrosion?