My elantra was stolen and recovered. Its currently in an impound lot 4 hours away. Do you know where i can buy the part? I asked if it was able to turn on and they didnt know or would check for me. Im just want to pick up the vehicle and hopefully get it home
@@KingJMan613 personally I’d try “you pull and pay” or “you pull it” to see if there is one available that has been crashed. Then I’d look into Amazon or eBay before I’d go to the dealership. Insurance paying then I’d go to the dealership
Yup. Junk like you saw. They know it also. I’ll recommend these cars only if someone absolutely needs something cheap and isn’t willing to pay or even really take care of it.. they’re throw away brands like Hyundai and Kia.
@@tonisteele4943 the inner ignition switch is what is usually what’s broken that’s the part that I had to remove with the hammer and driver. The ignition cylinder just happened to brake on the end so I replaced that as well.
Thanks for the video! They failed at stealing my gf's 2014 Elantra - we replaced the back window and ignition assembly and it starts, but the instrument cluster (speedometer, fuel gauge) doesn't work now (along with shift interlock, which has an easy workaround). Tried unplugging the cluster, cleaning contacts, replacing fuse. The fuse socket isn't getting power. It did have moisture inside for ~1.5 weeks from melting snow. Any ideas?
Wow they just tried to steal my 2013 Elantra but failed thanks to the club on the pedal to steering wheel. They broke my rear window too. $275 fix, now I'm just ordering ignition switch and housing.
Yea the fuses and the grounds I’d check. The tail lights were inoperable with this Hyundai however I didn’t know about that when I received it. I could say it was because of the theft or not. I’m thinking after you say this it was because of the theft.
How would you know if the ignition cylinder needs to be repaired also? Someone tried stealing my 2017 Hyundai Elantra and ruined the ignition switch so I have to replace that, how do you know if damage is also done to the cylinder?
Check the connections of ignition cylinder and where they mount. This one had been cracked around the cylinder where it meets the switch. A lot of times these people destroy everything but ignition could be salvaged.
I went to the dealer to pick these up because this was an insurance paid job. For customers I have paying out of pocket I’ll pick up from eBay or you pull it or Amazon.
Hey!!! Do you recall the part number used? I'm replacing the lock cylinder on a 2020 Hyundai Elantra (w/o push button start) and don't know if I should go with the 81905-F2230 (which is what my dealership quoted me, even though the P/N description mentions push button start) or the 81900-F2H00. Thank you!
@@PilesofGoo Key Sub S031: 81900-F2H00 $315.56 Body & SS032: 81910-F2130 $192.21 Shroud -Sm006: 84855-F2000-TRY $53.61 This was everything I ordered and completed the job. Besides the driver door lock I picked up at you pull it. And rekey I did at a local key guy. $85 to rekey. The 81900-F2H00 was the base model turn key cylinder. Not the push button.
The next time you do this job spend 20.00 dollar's buy a cordless drimel with a cut off wheel slide the steering wheel forward gives you lots of room to cut a slot to use a flat blade screwdriver to remove the collar.
@@troyhausmann1751 yea I understand your point. But that’s really it though. Take those two screws out of the top and the whole assembly comes out and install the new one. It’s simple. Once you get in it you’ll see how easy it is. Nothing to it really. Get in there and check it out for yourself. I’m sure you’ll say the same thing I did. It’s like 10 min job if that.
@@obamazadork yea I sucked at picking the music on this one. Let me work on changing it. You’re the 2nd person and probably every one else who watched this.
My elantra was stolen and recovered. Its currently in an impound lot 4 hours away. Do you know where i can buy the part? I asked if it was able to turn on and they didnt know or would check for me. Im just want to pick up the vehicle and hopefully get it home
@@KingJMan613 personally I’d try “you pull and pay” or “you pull it” to see if there is one available that has been crashed. Then I’d look into Amazon or eBay before I’d go to the dealership. Insurance paying then I’d go to the dealership
These cars are junk yet they still sell so well.
Some companies won’t insure these anymore
I had mine stolen last week
Yup. Junk like you saw. They know it also. I’ll recommend these cars only if someone absolutely needs something cheap and isn’t willing to pay or even really take care of it.. they’re throw away brands like Hyundai and Kia.
Do you have to reprogramming the key when you replace the ignition switch assembly??
That is what I wanted to ask
No. On this Hyundai particularly ate not chipped or none programmed keys
And that’s how they get away
Wait it’s 2 parts ? Can I see another video but the bottom part so I know what I’m doing or pulling and putting back together
@@tonisteele4943 the inner ignition switch is what is usually what’s broken that’s the part that I had to remove with the hammer and driver. The ignition cylinder just happened to brake on the end so I replaced that as well.
Thanks for the video! They failed at stealing my gf's 2014 Elantra - we replaced the back window and ignition assembly and it starts, but the instrument cluster (speedometer, fuel gauge) doesn't work now (along with shift interlock, which has an easy workaround). Tried unplugging the cluster, cleaning contacts, replacing fuse. The fuse socket isn't getting power. It did have moisture inside for ~1.5 weeks from melting snow. Any ideas?
Wow they just tried to steal my 2013 Elantra but failed thanks to the club on the pedal to steering wheel. They broke my rear window too. $275 fix, now I'm just ordering ignition switch and housing.
Yea the fuses and the grounds I’d check. The tail lights were inoperable with this Hyundai however I didn’t know about that when I received it. I could say it was because of the theft or not. I’m thinking after you say this it was because of the theft.
You change the parts??
How would you know if the ignition cylinder needs to be repaired also? Someone tried stealing my 2017 Hyundai Elantra and ruined the ignition switch so I have to replace that, how do you know if damage is also done to the cylinder?
Check the connections of ignition cylinder and where they mount. This one had been cracked around the cylinder where it meets the switch. A lot of times these people destroy everything but ignition could be salvaged.
How much did it cost you to get it fixed?
@@Rahulthandu we ended up just popping the ignition into place and the mechanic just rewired some wires and didn’t charge anything
Nice!
Where you get the part brother
I went to the dealer to pick these up because this was an insurance paid job. For customers I have paying out of pocket I’ll pick up from eBay or you pull it or Amazon.
Hey!!! Do you recall the part number used? I'm replacing the lock cylinder on a 2020 Hyundai Elantra (w/o push button start) and don't know if I should go with the 81905-F2230 (which is what my dealership quoted me, even though the P/N description mentions push button start) or the 81900-F2H00. Thank you!
@@PilesofGoo let me look for the receipts.
@@PilesofGoo
Key Sub S031: 81900-F2H00 $315.56
Body & SS032: 81910-F2130 $192.21
Shroud -Sm006: 84855-F2000-TRY $53.61
This was everything I ordered and completed the job. Besides the driver door lock I picked up at you pull it. And rekey I did at a local key guy. $85 to rekey.
The 81900-F2H00 was the base model turn key cylinder. Not the push button.
How do I take off the new ignition switch. I think I put it in to early 😅
@@coldchilln carefully pry it out with a pocket screwdriver. But try to take the whole assembly out first.
dumb question but why exactly did you need to take off the collar? I feel like you had access to every connect/disconnect needed without touching that
You know, I never tried to do it without taking the collar off. Try it I’d like to know.
The next time you do this job spend 20.00 dollar's buy a cordless drimel with a cut off wheel slide the steering wheel forward gives you lots of room to cut a slot to use a flat blade screwdriver to remove the collar.
Thanks for the heads up.. I’ll be sure to work it out like this next time. Thank you
You never showed how to replace it. You should have to take those screws loose then it was already out. This was not help whatsoever.
@@troyhausmann1751 yea I understand your point. But that’s really it though. Take those two screws out of the top and the whole assembly comes out and install the new one. It’s simple. Once you get in it you’ll see how easy it is. Nothing to it really. Get in there and check it out for yourself. I’m sure you’ll say the same thing I did. It’s like 10 min job if that.
That music is annoying as fuck
Yes that’s for sure. Usually folks just fast forward through it what I thought haha. You suffered a little too much homie
Why the stupid music to ruin a good video?
@@obamazadork yea I sucked at picking the music on this one. Let me work on changing it. You’re the 2nd person and probably every one else who watched this.
How much does this kind of repair cost?
It’s truly about 1 hour labor. Depending on the shop or person it’s whatever their labor rate is. I charged, at the time of this, $80 an hour.
The parts totaled $560 mechanic costs
My labor totaled $160
@@Myguyabqwooo you the best I need somebody for fix my carr