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Heating Ventilation Air Conditioning (HVAC) Module - EMTC

WARNING: This page is about a different car, the 2013 Ford Explorer. However, it is still accessible from the selected car via links, so may be relevant.

The EMTC  system uses a remote HVAC  module that is separate from the control interface. For details on the HVAC  module communication, REFER to CLIMATE CONTROL - EMTC , CONTROL SYSTEM LOGIC .

The HVAC  module also controls the outputs for the interior ambient lighting, rear window defrost and heated seats.

The HVAC  module utilizes an FET  protective circuit strategy for its actuator outputs. Output load (current level) is monitored for excessive current (typically short circuits) and is shut down (turns off the voltage or ground provided by the module) when a fault event is detected. A short circuit DTC  is stored at the fault event and a cumulative counter is started.

When the demand for the output is no longer present, the module resets the FET  circuit protection to allow the circuit to function. The next time the driver requests a circuit to activate that has been shut down by a previous short (Field-Effect Transistor (FET) protection) and the circuit is still shorted, the FET  protection shuts off the circuit again and the cumulative counter advances.

When the excessive circuit load occurs often enough, the module shuts down the output until a repair procedure is carried out. The FET  protected circuit has 3 predefined levels of short circuit tolerance based on the harmful effect of each circuit fault on the FET  and the ability of the FET  to withstand it. A module lifetime level of fault events is established based upon the durability of the FET  . If the total tolerance level is determined to be 600 fault events, the 3 predefined levels would be 200, 400 and 600 fault events.

When each tolerance level is reached, the short circuit DTC  that was stored on the first failure cannot be cleared by a command to clear the DTCs  . The module does not allow the DTC  to be cleared or the circuit to be restored to normal operation until a successful self-test proves that the fault has been repaired. After the self-test has successfully completed (no on-demand DTCs  present), DTC  U1000:00 and the associated DTC  (the DTC  related to the shorted circuit) automatically clears and the circuit function returns.

When each level is reached, the DTC  associated with the short circuit sets along with DTC  U1000:00. These DTCs  can be cleared using the module self-test, then the Clear DTC  operation on the scan tool. The module never resets the fault event counter to zero and continues to advance the fault event counter as short circuit fault events occur.

If the number of short circuit fault events reach the third level, then DTCs  U1000:00 and U3000:49 set along with the associated short circuit DTC  . DTC  U3000:49 cannot be cleared and a new module must be installed after the repair.

The HVAC  requires PMI  when it is replaced.