Automotive Engineers are Trying to Ruin My Life!

in #hive-1741222 years ago

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It’s like they took a $50 part and built the rest of the car around it.

After barely being able to change out one front blend door actuator in my 2005 Lincoln Navigator, I found out there are 2 of them. This actuator controls the heating and air conditioning in the front of the vehicle. It has plastic gears inside that overtime will break. So why not put them in an accessible place?? Oh, that would be common sense.

Check out this video and you will see in better detail what it takes to change this part. I'm willing to bet that a mechanic shop would charge around $3,000. The whole stinkin' dash needs to be removed in order to get to the lower one.

We have had this car for 13 years and its been a great vehicle. Just typical wear and tear items and maintence. Its got 175k miles and runs strong.


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a very fun adventure.. :P j/k

U're a good man for getting through all that.

Since you are so handy electrical wise I was wondering if you knew how to put switches in for wall mounted lights. Despite housing inspection making me a few years ago switch over some of my pull chain lights, the kitchens mainly, (duplex), I still have pull chains in the bedrooms and wall mounted lamps with a turn switch on the bottom. Back than all the electrician did was take some tin snips and cut a square in the kitchen lamp housing than run some metal housing the wires across the ceiling and down the wall to a switch. I am remodeling my bathroom and would like to get rid of the pull chain light in there, kids always are pulling the string to hard and breaking them and I am tired of replacing the connector inside. Because it's a bathroom I'd have to do gfci. Would the hot/cold wires be run down that housing to the switch plate or because it's a gfci is it more complicated than that.