Guess it was my "lucky" day. Alternator wasn't charging.
But 12 hours before it was working perfectly.
Guess it was my "lucky" day. Alternator wasn't charging.
Same thing happened with our Acadia. I fixed it myself a couple weeks ago and the cuts on my hands have almost healed!
Owning a 986 or newer Porsche really spoils you for having to mess with headlights in other vehicles...FRUNKenstein wrote: ↑Wed Mar 04, 2020 9:24 am
I now need to replace the same headlight bulb that was burned out when I bought our Acadia in November. I was really hoping that those bulbs would last longer than 3 months. Oh well, at least they designed it so that the bulb is really easy to replace. You totally don't have to remove the wheel well liner at all to get to it, then kneel down and stick your hand 2 feet up into a blind hole and fumble around with small wire retaining clips or anything.
Acadia alternator requires removal of wheel well liner, engine cover, radiator cover, power steering line, upper radiator hose. Which gives you almost enough room to pull the thing out the top of the engine bay so long as you rotate it 37 times to allow it to clear some stuff; then repeat with the new one headed back down. Other than that, it's simple.FRUNKenstein wrote: ↑Wed Mar 04, 2020 9:24 am
I now need to replace the same headlight bulb that was burned out when I bought our Acadia in November. I was really hoping that those bulbs would last longer than 3 months. Oh well, at least they designed it so that the bulb is really easy to replace. You totally don't have to remove the wheel well liner at all to get to it, then kneel down and stick your hand 2 feet up into a blind hole and fumble around with small wire retaining clips or anything.
Sounds like my old Escape. Except you didn't mention having to remove the passenger wheel, it's axle, unbolting the engine from the body, and jacking up the engine by 6"...DTMiller wrote: ↑Wed Mar 04, 2020 9:51 amAcadia alternator requires removal of wheel well liner, engine cover, radiator cover, power steering line, upper radiator hose. Which gives you almost enough room to pull the thing out the top of the engine bay so long as you rotate it 37 times to allow it to clear some stuff; then repeat with the new one headed back down. Other than that, it's simple.FRUNKenstein wrote: ↑Wed Mar 04, 2020 9:24 am
I now need to replace the same headlight bulb that was burned out when I bought our Acadia in November. I was really hoping that those bulbs would last longer than 3 months. Oh well, at least they designed it so that the bulb is really easy to replace. You totally don't have to remove the wheel well liner at all to get to it, then kneel down and stick your hand 2 feet up into a blind hole and fumble around with small wire retaining clips or anything.
Why do the current flock of design engineers totally disregard the end user maintenance problem? One would think that would be part of the educational process. Perhaps it is on purpose to force the do-it-yourself people to the dealership for even the most basic of repairs. HHHMMM?DTMiller wrote: ↑Wed Mar 04, 2020 9:51 amAcadia alternator requires removal of wheel well liner, engine cover, radiator cover, power steering line, upper radiator hose. Which gives you almost enough room to pull the thing out the top of the engine bay so long as you rotate it 37 times to allow it to clear some stuff; then repeat with the new one headed back down. Other than that, it's simple.FRUNKenstein wrote: ↑Wed Mar 04, 2020 9:24 am I now need to replace the same headlight bulb that was burned out when I bought our Acadia in November. I was really hoping that those bulbs would last longer than 3 months. Oh well, at least they designed it so that the bulb is really easy to replace. You totally don't have to remove the wheel well liner at all to get to it, then kneel down and stick your hand 2 feet up into a blind hole and fumble around with small wire retaining clips or anything.
Agreed! I think us "Mature" folks have it all figured out!Einsteiger wrote: ↑Wed Mar 04, 2020 11:28 am I think the designs are purposeful - to drive the labor hours higher for dealer service departments. Dealerships make money from service, not sales, and independent shops also charge by the hour. They win - we lose
Actually if you talk to techs at dealers, they hate this garbage too as tasks that should be simple and fast turn into multi hour pains in the ass. The SAs hate it because they have to explain to the customer why a traditionally fast/cheap job needs hours and will cost a fortune.Einsteiger wrote: ↑Wed Mar 04, 2020 11:28 am I think the designs are purposeful - to drive the labor hours higher for dealer service departments. Dealerships make money from service, not sales, and independent shops also charge by the hour. They win - we lose