Home / DTC / B3642 — Seat cool temperature switch shorted

B3642 — Seat cool temperature switch shorted

Detailed page for trouble code B3642.

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Code

B3642

HUMMER B — Body

Seat cool temperature switch shorted

Brand: HUMMER
Type: B — Body
Views: UK: 8 EN: 11 RU: 8
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Page language: EN

Causes

  • Short in the seat cool temperature switch wiring to battery voltage or ground
  • Failed/shorted seat cool temperature switch or sensor
  • Corroded, bent, or damaged connector pins at the switch or module
  • Faulty body control / seat control module input circuit
  • Water intrusion or moisture in connector or seat cushion area

Symptoms

  • Seat cooling/heating function for the affected seat may not operate or behaves intermittently
  • DTC B3642 stored in the body/seat control module
  • Possible HVAC or seat control warning message or limited functionality
  • Unusual electrical behavior near seat (fused circuits blowing, intermittent operation)

What to check

  • Verify the MIL/DTC and any related codes using a diagnostic scanner; note freeze frame or history if available
  • Visually inspect connectors, wiring, and harness routing at the seat and under-seat area for damage, pinch points, or moisture
  • Inspect seat surface and trim for signs of water intrusion
  • Check related fuses and relays for the seat cooling/heating circuits
  • Perform basic continuity and short-to-ground/short-to-voltage checks on the switch circuit

Signal parameters

  • Reference: many seat temperature switches use a variable resistance (thermistor) or a simple switched contact — consult OEM specs
  • Expected resistance for a thermistor-style sensor at ~25°C: typically in the kilo-ohm range (e.g., ~2 kΩ–20 kΩ), varies by design
  • Expected switch continuity: closed ≈ 0–5 Ω, open ≈ OL / very high resistance (if switch-type)
  • Sensor/switch signal voltage (if used): typically a variable 0.5–4.5 V signal to module; a short may read near 0 V or battery voltage (12 V) depending on fault
  • Module input should not show a steady short to ground or battery when switch disconnected from connector

Diagnostic algorithm

  1. Read and record B3642 and any related codes. Note if the code is current or history.
  2. Inspect visually: remove seat trim access panels, inspect the switch connector, wiring harness, and seat area for damage, corrosion, or moisture.
  3. With ignition OFF, disconnect the seat cool temperature switch connector and inspect pins for corrosion, bent or pushed-out terminals.
  4. Check for short to ground or battery on the harness side connector: measure pin-to-pin continuity to ground and to battery positive (with battery disconnected or key OFF as appropriate). A low resistance to ground or battery indicates a shorted wire.
  5. Measure resistance of the temperature switch itself (bench test): compare measured resistance to OEM spec (if switch-type expect near 0 Ω closed, OL open; thermistor will vary with temp). If the switch shows a shorted reading (very low resistance) or out-of-spec, replace the switch.
  6. If harness checks good with connector disconnected, probe the module input with connector connected and ignition ON and compare signal to expected voltages per service manual. Do NOT back-probe unknown connectors without reference data; consult wiring diagrams.
  7. Wiggle-test wiring and connectors while observing scanner live data or monitoring for code set; intermittent changes indicate chafe or broken wires.
  8. If wiring and switch are good, suspect the body/seat control module input. Verify power and grounds to module, then consult module-level diagnostics — replace module only after confirming input circuit fault and ruling out wiring/sensor.
  9. Repair any damaged wiring or replace the switch/connector as needed. Dry and clean any moisture-affected areas, apply dielectric grease, and secure harness routing away from pinch points.
  10. Clear codes, perform functional test of seat cooling, and verify code does not return after several key cycles and test drive.

Likely causes

  • Damaged wiring harness near the seat (pinched, chafed, or rubbed through) causing a short to ground
  • Connector terminal pushed out, bent, or corroded at the seat temperature switch
  • Failed temperature switch with internal short
  • Moisture ingress around switch connectors

Fault status

⚠️ Status
Seat cool temperature switch circuit short detected — the control module reports a short to voltage or ground on the seat cooling temperature switch input.
🟡 Repair difficulty: Medium
⏱️ Diagnostic time: 0.5-2 hours

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