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Ford WindstarIntroduced in the mid-1990s, the front-wheel-drive Ford Windstar minivan campaigned with an emphasis on, and reputation for, safety. And in the hotly contested family minivan market of the time, that was an especially solid piece of ground to be on. As long as buyers didn't need to haul adults in back on a regular basis, the Windstar served a family's needs just fine.
The power door locks on my 2001 Ford Windstar have been slowly dieing. I hit the button to unlock/lock the doors and both front doors' locks move, but not enough to unlock the door. If I keep trying, they move less and less each time. The right rear sliding door makes an obnoxious WHARRRR noise also and sometimes the rear sliding doors won't lock/unlock too.
I searched some other forums and found that it maybe a bad ground. Where can I find the grounds on my van to check them?
I went to NAPA to order new actuators thinking originally that they were bad since that's what the repair shop told us. They wanted over $700 to fix them. NAPA gave me four new ones that fit the sliding doors only and not the front doors. They also required rivets to be attached, which I can't do.
Same thing on my 2001. Both front door motors would not work. The door lock motors were kaput. I could have purchased new motors and replaced them but I'm too much of a cheapskate. So instead I removed the actuators, split the case and repaired the motor inside. Now to my wifes delight, all the PDLs work.
$700? for what?
Rivets are to be drilled out and replaced with a suitable nut/bolt upon re-assembly
This is not for the faint at heart. Possibly a good chance you might mess up the motor and have to buy a new one anyway. You will need to know how to solder and have some 2.7 ohm resistors small enough to fit into the motor case.
Remove the actuator and pry the case open from the end opposite of the two aluminum rivets. The plastic welds on each post holding it together should pop off easily. You only need to pry the case open about 3/4" just enough you remove the motor from the case. It's held there by the two electrical contacts.
Once the motor is out you need to open it by prying open the two crimps that hold the white end cap on.
Carfully remove the end cap and set the rest aside. In the end cap is a rectangular disk that's pressed in, remove it. This disk is the cause of your problems. On my motors I measured the disks and one was at 5.5 ohms and the other was at 25 ohms. That's too high for the motor to work. The disk needs to be around 3 ohms or less to work. That's where the 2.7 ohm resistor comes in. Determine where in the motor end cap that the resistor will fit and not interfere with the motor spinning. Then decide on where the resistor leads will go. Scrape the disk where you will attach the leads, one each side and solder them there. Slide the disk back into the motor cap with the attached resistor. The resistor should be off to one side away from the motor rotor.
Assemble the motor and re-crimp the end cap back on, it only goes one way. Re-install the motor back into the actuator case and ensure the gears are in place. Press the case closed and use tape and zip ties to hold in together. Re-install the actuator back into the door.
Worked for me and cost me nothing! Just makes me wonder what they were thinking when the engineered this part. It's things like this that give Ford a bad name.
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