Thanks for the video, I have been watching a few of these, getting ready to replace a blend door on my Son's 2002 F-150, we both will work on it together.
@@johnhugon8305 I see it's been a couple years since you fixed yours, I hope it's still working like it should if you still have the truck. I liked a comment on another video where the person said to turn the thermostat knob all the way to cold then have the new blend door in the closed position against the heater core, then the peg as it is indexed should go right in to the bottom of the new blend door and the actuator motor should slide right on . my son and I are going to start on his F150 soon. Thanks again for the video and explaining things so well.
@@dddddd2100 …the person said to turn the thermostat knob all the way to cold then have the new blend door in the closed position against the heater core, then the peg as it is indexed should go right in to the bottom of the new blend door and the actuator motor should slide right on ... I would say that would be correct…as long as everything is lined up. If the actuator does not side on the blend door shaft you need to find out why. I still have the truck; a lot of miles left in it…I wish I could say that with my 2017 Silverado…
Thanks for the video, I have been watching a few of these, getting ready to replace a blend door on my Son's 2002 F-150, we both will work on it together.
Kudos for a good video. You're pretty tough to be out there working with the temp in the teens.
1999 F-150 is the truck being repaired
I guess you would call it a “butcher” repair and it functions perfectly two years later.
The box is Calle a plenum
What year is this F150?
1999
@@johnhugon8305 I see it's been a couple years since you fixed yours, I hope it's still working like it should if you still have the truck. I liked a comment on another video where the person said to turn the thermostat knob all the way to cold then have the new blend door in the closed position against the heater core, then the peg as it is indexed should go right in to the bottom of the new blend door and the actuator motor should slide right on . my son and I are going to start on his F150 soon. Thanks again for the video and explaining things so well.
@@dddddd2100 …the person said to turn the thermostat knob all the way to cold then have the new blend door in the closed position against the heater core, then the peg as it is indexed should go right in to the bottom of the new blend door and the actuator motor should slide right on
...
I would say that would be correct…as long as everything is lined up. If the actuator does not side on the blend door shaft you need to find out why. I still have the truck; a lot of miles left in it…I wish I could say that with my 2017 Silverado…