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Seat heaters - Theory of Operation (special thanks to Ari) Adjustable seat heater operation - The element is a zig-zag loop of stranded wire that has a low resistance (the entire loop only has a couple/few ohms of resistance). The thermistor has a negative temperature coefficient. That is, as the temperature goes down, the resistance goes up, and vice versa. You can check it by putting it into a cup of ice and monitoring the resistance between the black and blue wires at the connector plug; the resistance should increase from 1000 ohms or so to 2000 ohms or more as it cools. All of the electronics are contained in the seat heater controller. The controllers are swappable left and right (all the same part number), and Ari is pretty sure they're the same between the 9000 and those late model OG900s with adjustable heated seats. The adjustable heated seats do not have any switches to detect seat occupation. You won't feel heat immediately when you sit in a seat that's been powered, and you won't feel much if any heat if you just lay your hand on a seat that's been powered - it takes some contact pressure to transfer the heat through the seat cover (true for my leather seats, anyway). The older heated seats were strictly OFF/ON. The passenger seat had a pressure switch to detect occupation; if the seat is unoccupied, the open switch keeps the seat heater off. I believe that the older seats also had thermistors that cycled the heaters on and off. |