My right rear widow regulator (jammed) so I took off the door panel after removing the regulator, I found this mess-
I found that the weak link on these regulators is twofold- first, there are no limit switches on these regulators, requiring the operator to release the switch when they hear the window hit the mechanical stops.
Second, the wire bail (pictured below) is nylon, with shallow grooves- this makes it easy for the cable to jump the bail and wrap into a knot. This peice should be made of steel IMO.
The photo below shows the bail AFTER I deepened the cable grooves with a dremel (with a 1/16th round bit) and small round file.
I went to my local Hardware store and bought 7 feet of 1/16 Stainless wire cable, and 4 1/16th cable crimps..
After removing the old cable, I threaded the new cable through the guides (below)
I can't go into too much detail on how to thread the bail- you just gotta play with it- I crimped the cable that goes onto the bottom of the bail first, wrapping the cable around the bail.
Then I put the bail ont the shaft, and pulled the other end of the cable very tightly, wrapping the top of the bail-
Then when I thought that I had it as tight as I could get it, I marked the cable with a sharpie- (where the crimp goes). After crimping, I rewrapped the cable and pushed the crimp into the bail
The little piece suspended below had to have it's tabs bent up to remove it from the widow slider- the crimp should be in the middle of the run.
This repair took me about 2 hours time and $5.00 in parts.
After installation, it worked great!
:thumbsup:
I found that the weak link on these regulators is twofold- first, there are no limit switches on these regulators, requiring the operator to release the switch when they hear the window hit the mechanical stops.
Second, the wire bail (pictured below) is nylon, with shallow grooves- this makes it easy for the cable to jump the bail and wrap into a knot. This peice should be made of steel IMO.
The photo below shows the bail AFTER I deepened the cable grooves with a dremel (with a 1/16th round bit) and small round file.
I went to my local Hardware store and bought 7 feet of 1/16 Stainless wire cable, and 4 1/16th cable crimps..
After removing the old cable, I threaded the new cable through the guides (below)
I can't go into too much detail on how to thread the bail- you just gotta play with it- I crimped the cable that goes onto the bottom of the bail first, wrapping the cable around the bail.
Then I put the bail ont the shaft, and pulled the other end of the cable very tightly, wrapping the top of the bail-
Then when I thought that I had it as tight as I could get it, I marked the cable with a sharpie- (where the crimp goes). After crimping, I rewrapped the cable and pushed the crimp into the bail
The little piece suspended below had to have it's tabs bent up to remove it from the widow slider- the crimp should be in the middle of the run.
This repair took me about 2 hours time and $5.00 in parts.
After installation, it worked great!
:thumbsup: