Want to cut long-term maintenance and repair costs? Choose OEM Blower Motor Resistor. Those parts deliver top durability you can trust. On our site, you'll find a huge catalog of genuine Pontiac Grand Am parts. Prices are unbeatable, so you can keep more in your pocket. Every OEM Pontiac Grand Am Blower Motor Resistor includes a manufacturer's warranty. You can also get an easy return policy that keeps buying risk free. Fast delivery, get your car on the road quickly. It's simple to search, compare, and order. Stop guessing about quality or fit. Order today and save with parts that last.
The Pontiac Grand Am Blower Motor Resistor allows drivers to choose several fan speeds so that cabin comfort remains accurate in any season. The Pontiac Grand Am owed its popularity to vivacious V6 torque, automatic transmissions that grew steadily in efficiency and smoothness, and a 1996 refresh that added sharper styling and a modern cabin. Later models abandoned bulky body cladding for a sleek profile that was pleasing to younger buyers, and dual airbags and better audio systems made for safer and more entertaining drives. Built on the proven A-body platform, the car was a balance of practicality for everyday use and sporty steering feel. Pontiac parts are genuine and will keep the car going strong even after years on the road. Pontiac owners like the fact that the car delivers affordable maintenance, good gas mileage, and extensive upgrade parts support so a properly maintained Grand Am cruises confidently. In that reliable package, one component stands out as a small yet important component, the Blower Motor Resistor. The Blower Motor Resistor provides a way to alter electrical resistance to command low, medium, or high fan operation to provide quick defrost on cold mornings or gentle cooling on mild days. Its rugged design is resistant to heat stress, fits Grand Am models from the mid-eighties through 2005, and very rarely fails when quality parts are applied. Installation is simple: disconnect the battery, remove the glove box, unbolt the resistor, replace the Blower Motor Resistor with a new one, reconnect wiring, refit panels, and test each fan speed.