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RDinNHandAZ

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Everything posted by RDinNHandAZ

  1. Here is another one with the plug in a different place. Amazon shows it as a fit for my 2010. https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B09P55PCQ6/ref=ox_sc_saved_image_1?smid=A31B1NF333K7B&psc=1
  2. Sorry I don’t but I have made/modified many bushings over the years. I measure the ID requirement with a caliper, then the most important OD of the current one or from the holder, and the length. Then I decide what material might work like nylon or bronze and try for a near match at Tractor Supply or Granger. Get the correct OD then either drill or ream it, cut it to length and instal it. Not a simple solution but it has worked many times for me. You could try these guys: https://www.bushingfix.com/ford-transit-connect-shifter-linkage-cable-bushing-replacement-kit/ Or: https://www.ebay.com/itm/335365257942?chn=ps&mkevt=1&mkcid=28
  3. First are you sure it's not just stuck? I had to unwind it pretty far and then lay down on the asphalt and kick the hell out of the spare to get it to break free and fall down. The spare on my 2010 gasser is secured by both the cable from the winch and a safety cable. Both connect to a bracket inserted into the spare wheel and bolted through one of the lug holes. I believe you will need to cut that free of the wheel to drop the wheel. A 4” grinder with a narrow metal cutting disk would be my first attempt, then a sawsall with metal cutting blade. My spare wheel was so rusted that I had to replace it. The bracket you cut and the winch together are available from Ford but are $300. The part # is: 5T1Z-1K353-A. I’d try to salvage it somehow!
  4. Thanks, Yesterday I pulled the lower windshield trim on the passenger side and reset everything. I sprayed the windshield with the hose and everything looks good and the water drains. I then went under the passenger dash and removed the trim under the glovebox, the carpet and the padding at the front of the wheel well. I found a leak in several places near the emergency fuel cut off box. One was coming from underneath it so I removed the box to confirm. It was there and I found some added weatherstrip adhesive added to the top seam after the car was made so it had been a problem earlier. I don’t understand why the previous owner failed to disclose the leaking. Bad Karma for that! I then dried everything out and coated the entire area with FlexSeal which is really too runny for vertical surfaces but several layers seemed to get it done. After drying for 5 hours I sprayed water again and so far have no leak. Friday is supposed to be a good hard rain so I reserve any statement of success until after that.
  5. I’ve been fighting this for 2 weeks now. Every rainstorm I get water into the passenger footwell. It is coming through the seams high up on the firewall behind the glovebox. I’ve tried to find the source but can’t. I pulled the plastic trim below the windshield and found the weatherstrip out of place and fixed that. No improvement. Under that I found a metal tray partly covering the access to the cabin air filter which sat on top of the windshield surface. I repositioned it to below the windshield so water would flow into it as it looks like it was intended but again no improvement. I replaced the cabin air filter and cleaned up around it but did not expect that was the answer and it was not. The water is not going into the filter or the HVAC system. In desperation I got some FlexSeal and sprayed the seams from the inside that I can get to but it just finds another seam to the right or left or higher up like there was a lake outside. Anyone have ideas I haven’t thought of?
  6. I’m glad my posts proved useful to you. I’m surprised and pleased that a TC can do those miles. I’ve used two of the China parking heaters and had good luck. I’m considering an all-in-one diesel box heater from Vevo or someone else for this van. Realistically it would be next summer for a build out. I’m struggling with water entering the passenger footwell when it rains. I’ve fixed the weather seal at the bottom of the windshield and the metal deflection tray slid under the bottom edge of the glass. Then I started looking inside as water kept coming. I sprayed a seam high up by the right of the glovebox on the firewall where I could see it enter. After that stopped the obvious leak the leak source moved up and more to the right so I plan to use the FlexSeal on that too. It’s like there is a pool of trapped water outside the firewall somewhere. Really I need to get to the other side and examine the face of the firewall behind the passenger tire I guess. How do I do that? I guess remove the wheel well liner? Interestingly there is no evidence of past water under the carpet and no rust. What could have changed? I’m going underneath with some ramps to lookk for what might be holding the water back. This has been a bear of an issue! With 60K on this van should I service the transmission? I’m thinking of buying a tranny pan with a drain plug $40 and replacing the filter and getting ford’s fluid and doing a drain and fill a few times. What’s been your experience?
  7. If you decide to do it yourself, I’ve used Permatex Weatherstrip Adhesive. https://www.amazon.com/Permatex-81850-Black-Weatherstrip-Adhesive/dp/B000HBI9EQ/ref=sr_1_4?crid=3M3EE5N3EE043&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.4UXtd2zmH4X27GrXfVRXZCAAv0dj9uIHCn6Ph8xE50XETRoMWatdRisjHWL_iMZaQ2vmRxb2Ix5mtCRx0luNa8vptMuiCo7RD2-d5fEEzchBNh7rHqswyV3vpANZQOitwjdPsSR2_gqQ6LWie8o9ejLBY-mARWbahuqd9ap62EDHwt2ArVgaGscvSZ6kXqdyBBuQxfIJN207bP1TyVOYGz2yr566me5NC1iVmGUUz9zoVPv6MV6NJ1B0AOin-wFNpkF6Y-T8KfWmi-zSefFA615Ty4tBVTJxJUqZ5q1k9ak.y4ukhNvK9_Jkp4Iwb2-ggcEEQtfWNqciSWwsHCcndYY&dib_tag=se&keywords=automotive%2Bweatherstrip%2Badhesive&qid=1722516881&sprefix=automotive%2Bweatherstrip%2Badhesive%2Caps%2C107&sr=8-4&th=1
  8. Thanks folks. Seeing that shield part is “only” $127 at my ford dealer makes me think I can confirm with them that it is correct and mostly complete to replace the shield that is missing and before ordering deal with the salvage yard nearby. We have lots of salt and dirt roads here so buying new might be the good option. Now I wonder where the shield I pictured above attached, if it in fact did? When I sign in to Ford Parts the browser leads me to a circular path of pages for sign in which fails the first time then to VIN, part number and back to confirm vehicle. I’m not impressed with Ford’s site. It should be easy enough for a caveman to do it. Yes I do resemble that remark.
  9. I recently bought a 2010 TC passenger van with 59,000 miles to convert to a one person travel van. I have been working on the exterior to mitigate the surface rust from our salty roads and doing a complete rustproofing. I was surprised to find the van has no splash shield at all! Every vehicle I have owned for the past 30 years has metal or plastic shields under the engine and sometimes even covering the entire front suspension, transmission, and engine. Amazon showed a shield which would attach to the plastic front bumper cover and extend to about the oil filter but I have nothing at the sides or rear to attach it to. I got one thinking it might be a solution but I cannot mount it. Was there another guard behind it? Was that metal or plastic and where except for a salvage yard would I get one?
  10. I just bought a silver 2010 Connect XLT passenger van with 59,000 miles here in NH for $4,700. I bought it from the first owner and he drove it about 3,000 miles a year for a one-man service business for a few years then as his back-up car to do errands to the transfer station, lumber hauling, and errand running. He had seat covers from day one so the seats look and feel brand new. It was serviced at a Ford dealer for most of that time but for the past few years he had oil changes and service done at an independent garage once a year despite the low miles. The tires are good and not outdated. There was lots of rust on the back bumper which I am replacing today and about half way along the pinch clamps of the rocker panels. No rust through. After a complete under body wash which I have done, I plan to treat the rust with an impregnating oil and wax based undercoat as well as some underneath areas that surface rust has affected. I do not plan to drive it in winter any more. It will help me transport my wife who has Alzheimer’s since she find’s it hard to get up into my 2001 Tacoma 4X4 which I need here in the snowy hills and dirt roads. The long term plan is to build it into a one person travel van. I’ve built out a succession of campers and will make the bed and cabinets modular and removable. I’m willing to put up with a bit of rust to get a very low mileage vehicle which has a stellar service record. I’m solving lots of little issues that a 14 yo car will have. The spare wheel is being changed out for one on the right rear once that one is repainted, the hood’s prop rod clip has been replaced, I’ve touched up a few chips in the paint, cleaned it well which it badly needed and straightened the antenna.It’s getting a wax job for the first time in many years too. I bought TPMS sensors to get the dash light to turn off as proper pressure didn’t fix it. I expect the batteries to have died. I welcome your input about service now that it is approaching 60K miles, about the rust treatment, the future conversion, and using it for transporting a person with limited mobility. Thank you.
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