The voltage is supposed to be present at the heater plug/pins at all times. The heater element is self-regulated with some kind of positive thermistor characteristics in the heating element itself. Which is fine, unless the element goes bonkers and stays on all the time. Then you have what's called BDS, or boiling diesel syndrome, which is known to make grown men cry on the side of the road,
sitting beside their CRD, hood up and engine not running. If not under warranty, BDS soon gives way to LWS, or lightened wallet syndrome, which is what keeps the Jeep parts department smiling when you call.
From the FSM, section 14-67:
"The element inside the heater assembly is made of a Postive Temperature Coefficient PTC material, and
has power applied to it by the fuel heater relay anytime the ignition key is in the on position.
PTC material has a high resistance to current flow anytime its temperature is high, which means it will not generate heat when the temperature is above a certain value. When the temperature is below 45F, the resistance of the PTC element is lowered and allows current to flow through the fuel heater element warming the fuel. When the temperature is above 85F, the PTC elements resistance rises, and current flow through the element stops."
What this means to you
As long as the PTC/heater element is working correctly, the range of temperature when the fuel heater is on full blast will be from 45F (and below) with decreasing heat function all the way up to 84F. Assuming the FSM is correct, that is, and this section wasn't lifted from a catepillar bulldozer manual when the tech writer couldn't get past the engineers voicemail. If the PTC element malfunctions, as in goes out of calibrated resistance design, you could have heated fuel in July. It could boil the diesel as you drive down the road with the AC on high. Unfortunately for us, the FSM does not list the correct resistance range so that we could test for a bad PTC day.
One could take measurements from a known good fuel head at 87F, toss the fuel head in the freezer (inside a plastic bag) when the wife isn't looking, and measure again at 40F. If your wife catches you before you report the results, ask her to spare the punishment long enough to report the results.