Jim Knight
Active LVC Member
Key onI will, thanks.does it matter if it's key on, or vehicle running?
Key onI will, thanks.does it matter if it's key on, or vehicle running?
I've seen now a couple times where people are going in behind the msg center and putting a zip tie around the broken portion apparently this works? Anyone heard of this
Where do you live?What creates the REAL problem is the geometry. The actuator puts out a lot of torque for such a small motor, and the steel arm that moves to close the lower blend door has a hole that the lower flap inserts into, when it should have been slotted to give it more distance of movement. So even after the lower door is closed all the way, the actuator is still turning and putting pressure on the upper arm, which weakens and then eventually breaks the plastic sleeve around the arm of the actuator that opens and closes the upper blend door. So my guru (who's replaced 160 of them) reinforced the upper sleeve breaks with a copper sleeve, and made the hole in the arm for the lower door into a slot to give it more movement. It'll never break again. The dash has to be pulled out -- not removed -- and he went in through the side behind the glove box. I should have taken pics of what he'd done to reinforce the upper sleeve and the slot, but, duh! just didn't think of it at the time.
FloridaRight now I'm in CT. Where are you?
Need help with mineWhat creates the REAL problem is the geometry. The actuator puts out a lot of torque for such a small motor, and the steel arm that moves to close the lower blend door has a hole that the lower flap inserts into, when it should have been slotted to give it more distance of movement. So even after the lower door is closed all the way, the actuator is still turning and putting pressure on the upper arm, which weakens and then eventually breaks the plastic sleeve around the arm of the actuator that opens and closes the upper blend door. So my guru (who's replaced 160 of them) reinforced the upper sleeve breaks with a copper sleeve, and made the hole in the arm for the lower door into a slot to give it more movement. It'll never break again. The dash has to be pulled out -- not removed -- and he went in through the side behind the glove box. I should have taken pics of what he'd done to reinforce the upper sleeve and the slot, but, duh! just didn't think of it at the time.