If I switch on the inside fan on and set the airflow direction to my feet,
air is still blowing in my face, although the direction setting is set
towards feet only, the air flow outlets that blow air into your face if not
sealed off.
I have to manually close the 4 airvents, the 2 vents below the hazard switch
and on the driver and passenger side.
On other cars, if you switch the air direction to your feet, air will only
blow towards your feet and not into your face.
Is this normal on a 206?
Kristof - 20 May 2005 13:45 GMT
I think this is normal, my 206 behaves the same way.
Cheers
> If I switch on the inside fan on and set the airflow direction to my feet,
> air is still blowing in my face, although the direction setting is set
[quoted text clipped - 9 lines]
>
> Is this normal on a 206?
Phil Cook - 20 May 2005 13:51 GMT
>If I switch on the inside fan on and set the airflow direction to my feet,
>air is still blowing in my face, although the direction setting is set
[quoted text clipped - 7 lines]
>
>Is this normal on a 206?
It could be a Pug quirk. My 306 will blows air through the open fascia
vents regardless of setting of the dial. I haven't investegated fully
but it /might/ be a case of the fascia vents blowing cooler air except
when you select them for the direction of air from the heater. This
set-up could be handy for preventing you getting drowsy when you need
the heater on full-blast for your frozen tootsies.
Philip Western - 23 May 2005 21:52 GMT
>>If I switch on the inside fan on and set the airflow direction to my feet,
>>air is still blowing in my face, although the direction setting is set
[quoted text clipped - 16 lines]
> set-up could be handy for preventing you getting drowsy when you need
> the heater on full-blast for your frozen tootsies.
My 406 hdi does exactly the same, and screen and face only don't come up as
an option.
phil