Like many, my Gen 2 drivers side heated seat died. 3.2 years and 42,*** miles, so no warranty help.
I bought the replacement heating element for $19. Plugged it in and confirmed it worked and the one in the seat did not. So time to get to work.
#1 - disconnect battery. No one wants to risk seat airbags being deployed.
#2 - unbolt the seat and remove 2 big molex connectors. remove the seat. Not bad for 3 years worth of dropped French fries.
#4 - I had a nice table with a blanket to work on. took my time, and got the bottom cushion off, I removed both plastic covers on the hinges and drivers seat controls when the seat was out of the truck.
#4b - here is the seat all broken down.
#5, now on to the good stuff. breaking the seat cushion down was not like the YouTube videos I saw. I went and bought a hog ring tool for nothing. our seats are held together with a plastic rod, not metal, and plastic Jesus clips embedded into the foam of the seat. you have to work them very carefully to get them to release. if you doit correctly, the seat leather will snap back on with no tools needed. I ri[[ed one outlying to figure it out and ended up super gluing it back in.
here you can see the plastic ribs and where my heating element melted right through it.
And here is the burned element itself....not sure how this doesn't catch the seat on fire.
#6 - new heating pad installed
Here is how she looks right before putting it back in the truck.
Put the seat back in the truck, and confirmed my buns are now toasty warm again. $19 and 2 hours of my time.
I bought the replacement heating element for $19. Plugged it in and confirmed it worked and the one in the seat did not. So time to get to work.
#1 - disconnect battery. No one wants to risk seat airbags being deployed.
#2 - unbolt the seat and remove 2 big molex connectors. remove the seat. Not bad for 3 years worth of dropped French fries.
#4 - I had a nice table with a blanket to work on. took my time, and got the bottom cushion off, I removed both plastic covers on the hinges and drivers seat controls when the seat was out of the truck.
#4b - here is the seat all broken down.
#5, now on to the good stuff. breaking the seat cushion down was not like the YouTube videos I saw. I went and bought a hog ring tool for nothing. our seats are held together with a plastic rod, not metal, and plastic Jesus clips embedded into the foam of the seat. you have to work them very carefully to get them to release. if you doit correctly, the seat leather will snap back on with no tools needed. I ri[[ed one outlying to figure it out and ended up super gluing it back in.
here you can see the plastic ribs and where my heating element melted right through it.
And here is the burned element itself....not sure how this doesn't catch the seat on fire.
#6 - new heating pad installed
Here is how she looks right before putting it back in the truck.
Put the seat back in the truck, and confirmed my buns are now toasty warm again. $19 and 2 hours of my time.
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