what have you gotten done on your blazer today?
The three most important things are to get a light with the electrical pigtail, one that has mounting holes in the right place, and one that has the retaining clip undamaged or missing.
Helped my son change out the passenger side motor mount. Not too bad but that bottom bolt to the engine block is a bit of a PITA. Will do the same tomorrow with the driver's side, hopefully he will only need a bit of guidance and maybe some encouragement. After that is done, he gets to throw a bunch of new parts back into it, to include timing cover, radiator and fan clutch and fan. Plus all the stuff he had to remove to get to those parts.
I greased everything under my left front wheel. Was going to do right too, but grease gun gave out on me. I had no idea my 02 blazer had the grease fittings. Figured only older ones had them. I just used some all purpose grease I had laying around.
Hate to say this, but your 02 Blazer IS an older vehicle.
Boo Hiss!
My 99 is ONLY 23 years old. I am still amazed that it has a door lock fob! My next newest vehicle is a 82 Prelude so to me it is new! So what if it is older than most undergraduate college kids in my town.
My 99 is ONLY 23 years old. I am still amazed that it has a door lock fob! My next newest vehicle is a 82 Prelude so to me it is new! So what if it is older than most undergraduate college kids in my town.
I repaired my 4WD!! The vehicle seemed to shift from 2HI to 4LO but not 4HI. Here's what I did.
A. Inspected vacuum hoses with propane. There didn't seem to be a leak, but the vacuum hoses from the check valve to the canister badly needed replacement.
B. Removed the battery and observed the actuator working. The actuator works so the cable and vacuum system must be OK.
C. Removed and cleaned and lubricated the transfer case encoder motor. I drilled 2 holes in the case, sprayed contact cleaner onto the switch, and worked the motor back and forth with leads to the battery. At first it was slow to turn and squeaky, but after repeating several times it seemed to zip along. I sprayed in some teflon lubricant and sealed the holes.
D. Tested for fault codes. I was receiving a fault Code 1 which is either "Circuit 40" or the transfer case control module. Circuit 40 includes the cargo light, dome light, courtesy lamps, door switches, and inadvertent power relay. As it turns out my cargo light was blown and a door switch was broken and always closed! I also cleaned the ground G409.
E. Repaired the 4WD switch. At this point the vehicle seemed to be going in and out of 4WD, however the lights on the switch on the dash seemed intermittent, and they turned off by themselves while driving. I removed the switch and re-soldered each of the joints and cleaned the switch connections. Now, the lights are nice and bright and the switch works reliably every time!
4WD just in time for winter!
A. Inspected vacuum hoses with propane. There didn't seem to be a leak, but the vacuum hoses from the check valve to the canister badly needed replacement.
B. Removed the battery and observed the actuator working. The actuator works so the cable and vacuum system must be OK.
C. Removed and cleaned and lubricated the transfer case encoder motor. I drilled 2 holes in the case, sprayed contact cleaner onto the switch, and worked the motor back and forth with leads to the battery. At first it was slow to turn and squeaky, but after repeating several times it seemed to zip along. I sprayed in some teflon lubricant and sealed the holes.
D. Tested for fault codes. I was receiving a fault Code 1 which is either "Circuit 40" or the transfer case control module. Circuit 40 includes the cargo light, dome light, courtesy lamps, door switches, and inadvertent power relay. As it turns out my cargo light was blown and a door switch was broken and always closed! I also cleaned the ground G409.
E. Repaired the 4WD switch. At this point the vehicle seemed to be going in and out of 4WD, however the lights on the switch on the dash seemed intermittent, and they turned off by themselves while driving. I removed the switch and re-soldered each of the joints and cleaned the switch connections. Now, the lights are nice and bright and the switch works reliably every time!
4WD just in time for winter!
I repaired my 4WD!! The vehicle seemed to shift from 2HI to 4LO but not 4HI. Here's what I did.
A. Inspected vacuum hoses with propane. There didn't seem to be a leak, but the vacuum hoses from the check valve to the canister badly needed replacement.
B. Removed the battery and observed the actuator working. The actuator works so the cable and vacuum system must be OK.
C. Removed and cleaned and lubricated the transfer case encoder motor. I drilled 2 holes in the case, sprayed contact cleaner onto the switch, and worked the motor back and forth with leads to the battery. At first it was slow to turn and squeaky, but after repeating several times it seemed to zip along. I sprayed in some teflon lubricant and sealed the holes.
D. Tested for fault codes. I was receiving a fault Code 1 which is either "Circuit 40" or the transfer case control module. Circuit 40 includes the cargo light, dome light, courtesy lamps, door switches, and inadvertent power relay. As it turns out my cargo light was blown and a door switch was broken and always closed! I also cleaned the ground G409.
E. Repaired the 4WD switch. At this point the vehicle seemed to be going in and out of 4WD, however the lights on the switch on the dash seemed intermittent, and they turned off by themselves while driving. I removed the switch and re-soldered each of the joints and cleaned the switch connections. Now, the lights are nice and bright and the switch works reliably every time!
4WD just in time for winter!
A. Inspected vacuum hoses with propane. There didn't seem to be a leak, but the vacuum hoses from the check valve to the canister badly needed replacement.
B. Removed the battery and observed the actuator working. The actuator works so the cable and vacuum system must be OK.
C. Removed and cleaned and lubricated the transfer case encoder motor. I drilled 2 holes in the case, sprayed contact cleaner onto the switch, and worked the motor back and forth with leads to the battery. At first it was slow to turn and squeaky, but after repeating several times it seemed to zip along. I sprayed in some teflon lubricant and sealed the holes.
D. Tested for fault codes. I was receiving a fault Code 1 which is either "Circuit 40" or the transfer case control module. Circuit 40 includes the cargo light, dome light, courtesy lamps, door switches, and inadvertent power relay. As it turns out my cargo light was blown and a door switch was broken and always closed! I also cleaned the ground G409.
E. Repaired the 4WD switch. At this point the vehicle seemed to be going in and out of 4WD, however the lights on the switch on the dash seemed intermittent, and they turned off by themselves while driving. I removed the switch and re-soldered each of the joints and cleaned the switch connections. Now, the lights are nice and bright and the switch works reliably every time!
4WD just in time for winter!
If you took any pictures of your repair, I'm sure others would appreciate a stand-alone post on your repair in case someone might find it useful in the future.