GM Service Manual Online
For 1990-2009 cars only

The automatic climate control assembly is the electronic climate control (ECC) module.

The control assembly contains the following controls:

    • A rotary knob to control blower speed
    • A rotary knob to control the air temperature
    • A rotary knob to select the desired operating mode
    • Up to four push buttons, depending on option content, that control:
       - Recirculated air
       - Fresh air
       - A/C operation
       - Rear Defogger (RPO C49)

The controls are lit when the parking lamps or headlamps are ON. The instrument panel lighting circuit provides voltage. The control assembly lamps are in parallel with the following components:

    • The instrument cluster bulbs
    • The radio dial bulb
    • Other interior illumination bulbs

The dimmer control of the headlamp switch controls the brightness of the control assembly lamps.

Blower Speed Control

The blower switch provides a choice of various blower speeds. The blower switch receives power through a fuse in the fuse block when the power is ON. In the various speed positions, the circuit continues through the heater wiring harness to the blower motor resistor assembly near the blower motor.

The circuit goes from the resistor assembly to the blower motor terminal in order to operate the blower motor.

The blower motor relay provides battery voltage to the blower motor assembly only during high blower motor assembly speed. The blower motor circuit is completed to ground by a wire in the heater wiring harness. The wire goes from the blower motor terminal to a terminal at the dash sheet metal near the blower assembly in the engine compartment.

Temperature Control

The temperature valve is controlled by the electric actuator. The motor within the electric actuator positions the valve based on the temperature knob location.

When the temperature knob is in the Blue (Cold) position, the air that is delivered by the HVAC system is unheated. When the temperature control is in the Red (Hot) position, all of the air that passes though the heater/vent module is heated before the air is discharged. Intermediate positions of the temperature control result in a mixture of heated and unheated air in order to provide more moderate air temperatures.

As the temperature control is moved away from the Blue (Cold) position, the temperature valve moves away from the heater core. This allows some air to flow through the heater core. As the temperature control is moved farther toward the Red (Hot) position, the following actions occur:

  1. The temperature valve is turned farther away from the entrance to the heater core
  2. The airflow increases through the heater core

Heating a greater portion of the total airflow in this manner results in a warmer discharge of air from the outlets.

When the temperature control is in the full Red (Hot) position, the temperature valve blocks off the passage that allows air to bypass the heater core. This causes all of the airflow to go through the heater core for maximum heating. This method of temperature control provides a rapid response to any change in temperature selection throughout the entire range when the engine is warmed up.

Mode Control

The mode rotary control knob operates a rotary vacuum switch that rotates engine vacuum to specific hoses in the vacuum harness. These hoses control various vacuum actuators on the HVAC system. Each actuator operates an air valve (a door-like hinged deflector) that routes the air to the various outlets as indicated by the symbols on the face plate.

For additional information on mode operation, refer to Operating Modes.