Bob#3
New Member
I completed the job of replacing my heater box this past weekend. Earlier in this thread someone (@airline tech ?) asked for a video showing the operation of the blend doors - once I had my old one out, I removed the motors from it and shot this video:
A few tips for anyone who attempts this job:
It's a pretty big one. I set aside both Sat and Sun to get it done. I started around noon on Sat, and worked for about 6 hours on it that day. Stopped after removal of the old blend box and install of new one, but left dash removed. On Sunday I started up around 10 am, and was completely finished with all the tools cleaned up before 3:30. I was not in a particular rush, and ran in to a few tricky complications due to some custom wiring I've added to this truck (trailer brake controller, amp power steps, dash cam, auto-fold mirrors, etc etc) that all have wiring running in and around the driver side footwell/dash... as a result, I could not easily completely remove the dashboard from the truck, and had to leave the driver side pretty close to the firewall. I was able to swing the passenger side all the way out far enough to give plenty of access, but it was a little tight sliding the old blend box off the AC condenser as a result.
Take LOTS of pictures with your cell phone as you go. Especially useful were the photos I took of specific wiring loom routing. When you pull the dash off, all the factory looms attached to the dash will be unplugged and all the routing will be changed up when you go to re-install. Having reference photos for what went where saved me a lot of frustration and time.
All the electrical connectors from the factory have some sort of release mechanism that should be *easy* to use...i.e, very little actual force is required. Sometimes though, it's really difficult to tell where the release tab is, or what direction to move it. My rule of thumb was if it took more than a little pressure from 1 finger, I was not doing it right, and should re-think how the connector worked. I did not break any electrical connectors during this entire job.
If you don't own a headlamp, buy 2 rechargeable ones before you start this job. Keep one charging while you use the other one. You'll need extra light basically the entire time.
You do NOT have to drain coolant or evacuate the A/C to complete this repair.
Chock the tires, and put the truck in neutral *before* you disconnect the battery. You have to chock the tires because you will have to release the parking brake to remove the center console and to make clearance to put the dash on the seats when you get to that point. If the truck is left in park, you'll have a really hard time getting the center console out...but there is a secret release mechanism:
There are 2 screws on the blend box itself that have to be both removed and re-installed by feel - they are on the firewall side of the box, sandwiched between the box and the firewall. There is *just* enough space to get a super stubby screwdriver back there, or, if you have a mini ratchet with a phillips bit, that will work well (and is what I used):
The single bolt that is located near where the dashboard meets the windshield on the passenger side was the single biggest pain-in-the-neck fastener in the entire project. I recommend just using an allen wrench/key to back the bolt out a half turn at a time until you are about to hit the windshield with the wrench, then switch to a pair of pliers to just grab the head of the bolt and spin.
You WILL need another set of hands to both remove the dash and re-install it. It's heavy, it's awkward, and lining things up on re-install was especially challenging. My wife helped me, and I'm happy to report that in spite of the experience we are still married.
I'm also pleased to report that the new blend box is working perfectly, and my truck's climate control is back to doing what it's supposed to.
There are no new rattles, and the only casualties were a couple of broken clips on the door sill plastic plates that sit at the bottom of the doors next to the seats, and a small piece broke off a light pipe on the passenger-side footwell for the interior ambient lighting. You can tell I'm all broken up about this horrible damage. ;-)
All in all, I'm VERY glad I did this job myself instead of both trusting and paying a dealer to do it. If you are at all handy, have some time and patience, you can do this job too.
Thanks for posting your video--it’s very helpful!
Since you said in the video that you'd keep the old heater box around in case there were followup questions, I actually made an account on this site so I could ask you a question.
Can you check whether the white plastic linkage in the center of the screen at 2:21 in your video (i.e., the piece with the metal pin that is moved by the driver’s side blend door actuator) can be removed/replaced? That piece snapped in half on my truck and I'm trying to figure out if I can replace just that piece (working from underneath the dash), or whether I’ll need to replace the entire heater blend box.
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