Heated Car Seat Teardown and Repair

Solarbotics Ltd
January 11, 2017

Here's a little makeover of an inexpensive aftermarket heated car seat heating pad that stopped working.

Designed to activate and warm up when sat upon, the electronics face a fair amount of abuse: since the seat is a soft frame, the wires inside constantly move and flex with the body. They are also subject to harsh temperature changes with frequent (very) cold weather heating and cooling cycles, adding to a situation ripe for a malfunction, which happened to one of our staff when he couldn't warm up his tush one cold Canadian morning...

Dragging it into the lab, we peeled back the covers to discover the usual and not-so-usual suspects.

Broken wires:

The old wires had a PVC jacket that had dried out and cracked.

“heated

“heated

The wires would then flex at these cracks and break:

“wires

We replaced those wires with our GroovyNoodle silicone wire, which is able to resist flexing and temperature fluctuations very well.

“Groovy

“Image

Sketchy Safety?

Here's a picture of the sketchy activation switch we found inside the bottom part of the seat. It's designed to close when under "bum load", and directly pass power to the heating coils. We're not experts at auto-grade accessory manufacturing, but we were surprised that it wasn't a logic "bum-detected" switch that triggered a suitable relay or FET elsewhere. And the lack of a thermal reset fuse surprised us.

“cheap

“cheap

Repaired

All broken wires replaced! Almost all the PVC jacket wire had cracked and disintegrated, so we replaced it with our better-quality GroovyNoodle silicone wire. This wire is extremely flexible, high strand count, and a temperature-ignoring silicon jacket. Perfect for inside this car seat heater.

“broken

All necessary repairs and upgrades were done just in time for the next stretch of (very much) cold Canadian winter.

“A

MORE POSTS

February 9, 2011
Interesting Mini-sumo build

This mini-sumo design by Jeremy Bloyd-Peshkin features our wheels, and one of our favourite building materials, Sintra. We can't laser-cut sintra (PVC=bad stuff when burned), but milling it works well, as this builder shows. The asymmetric motor layout works, as proven by this contest-winning design (scroll to the bottom of the page).

April 24, 2013
Phones Are Down

Yes! Phones refuse to work and we are currently beating them into submission with a complete trust in our victory over them. Also, just to let you know, we haven't fallen off the face of the planet, we are just very busy getting ready to the Calgary Comic & Entertainment Expo, which will take place […]

June 28, 2001
BEAM Tools - See What We Use

We asked Grant, our resident BEAM technician, to come up with a list of some of the tools he uses, and here we have it! This list will help those first starting out to see what they should use, and for those who've been doing it awhile we have some of our more advanced tools. […]

April 2, 2004
SunSwinger Documentation online

We just got the PDF documentation up for the SunSwinger, so you'll see it listed as a resource under the SunSwinger product info page. Hope you all enjoyed April Fool's. The Spazovore was only a partial joke - anybody who ordered one will be receiving one!

Solarbotics Ltd Logo
Solarbotics has been operating for more than 25 years, bringing electronics know-how and supplies to both the electronics professional and hobbyist. We'll be happy to help you too!

Solarbotics, Ltd. is not responsible for misprints or errors on product prices or information. For more information, please see our Terms and Conditions.

Warning: This product contains chemicals known to the State of California to cause cancer and birth defects or other reproductive harm.
Please visit www.P65Warnings.ca.gov for more information. This item was manufactured prior to August 31, 2018.

cart