Midlife wins the prize. I found the problem earlier this afternoon (prior to reading Midlife's post) and it was indeed the in-line fuse connector. Given the poor connection of the fuse on the "non-spring" end it's a miracle it ever worked. I'll caulk it up to another crappy reproduction harness. The wires themselves were fine but the in-line fuse connector itself was a "hot mess" / "el cheapo" part.
As result, I bought a much better in-line fuse holder (better design with end caps that completely surround the end tips of the fuse as opposed to trying to make connection with just the top of the fuse tips), cut the wires, re-crimped and soldered in the replacement connectors harvested from the replacement in-line fuse holder I bought today and presto - all better. Thanks all for your ideas.
Diagnosis Procedure + Repair
- removed dash to get better access to the wires
- tested power to the back of the stud on the ignition switch (good)
- tested power in the wire lead from the ignition switch stud to the "hot" side of the fuse holder (good)
- tested power in the wire lead from the ignition switch stud (in-line fuse connected) to the "fused" side of the fuse holder (no power)
- used another fuse to ensure current fuse wasn't bad but not blown (fuse was fine)
- used a jumper cable to link the hot lead from the ignition switch to the wire lead to the AC unit (fan turns on as expected)
- buy new in-line fuse holder
- Macgyver new in-line fuse holder into existing wiring harness
- test connection / fan now works and shake head at crappy in-line fuse holder that was in that harness
I hope everyone had a great Father's Day.
Regards,
Ron