Recently I noticed that the passenger side temp mix door was stuck on hot. As I investigated I found that 3 of the 5 actuators were not working any more. I was aware of the common problem of the main drive gear in the actuator cracking and spinning on the hub so it will never go through a proper re-calibration any more. Unfortunately one of the broken ones was the recirculation door at the top so I knew I was in for a rough time getting the dash apart, and it was all they said it would be
, along with several aged plastic tabs that broke along the way and will need some minor repairs on assembly. So I ended up removing all 5 actuators and came up with a repair solution that only cost a few pennies and my time, which would be the same no matter what repair I came up with. I know you can buy a replacement gear from Amazon for about 15 dollars but that would be $75 for the lot, and replacing the whole actuator would cost even more than that, especially if I wanted to replace all 5 for my trouble. Instead I bought a set of roll pins (https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0DFLHP2HB/?tag=gmtnation-20) and used a 5/64 x 1" for each gear.

After removing the cracked gear/hub from the assembly, I removed the gear from the hub and then rotated it so that the crack would end up about halfway between 9 and 12 o'clock when the gear is in its midrange position. In this position the crack would never come into contact with either the pot. gear or the idler so no worries of skipping or jumping or damage to the other gears. I then drilled the hole for the roll pin roughly 90 degrees from the crack (roughly being the key word here LOL). The hole should be about 1/8" in from the front edge of the gear; in that location the hole doesn't contact the narrow faced pot. gear and the idler gear has a wide enough face that the hole is irrelevant. Drill all the way through so the pin can be punched out if needed. Try to make sure the drill is lined up as close to center as possible--if it's too far off center then when it breaks through the center and starts into the other side of the metal hub it could pull the drill off center and cause problems getting the roll pin in. Ideally should use a drill press for this, trying to do it by hand probably will go badly. Then drive the pin all the way through evenly. When the pin is in the 1/8" location off the front edge there is no interference with anything as the door input shaft only goes part way in the other end.

Final assembly: rotate the pot. gear so that the 2 raised round bosses are horizontal and the lettering is at the top. Then work the repaired gear in so that the gear is midrange when meshed with the pot. gear (slots in hub end are vertically aligned). Then replace the idler gear. After this check the resistance between pin 7-9 and pin 9-10; they should be measuring roughly the same when the pot. gear is aligned correctly, about 4.5K ohm, if not then rotate the drive gear one tooth or whatever is needed. One exception to this is the recirculation door which does not use a pot. for positioning, just goes from end to end as needed so no gear alignment is needed.
After re-installing the actuators without connecting them, I re-attached the battery and then plugged the connectors in one at a time to verify that re-calibration goes through on each one. Perfect!
It took me about 6-7 hours to get to this point, tomorrow will be full dash re-assembly day. Bonus: I no longer have to be on pins and needles whenever I need to disconnect the battery any more, which is good because here in Arizona batteries only last 3-4 years in the heat so it's a regular thing.
At the tone the time will be: beer-thirty Mountain Time.
, along with several aged plastic tabs that broke along the way and will need some minor repairs on assembly. So I ended up removing all 5 actuators and came up with a repair solution that only cost a few pennies and my time, which would be the same no matter what repair I came up with. I know you can buy a replacement gear from Amazon for about 15 dollars but that would be $75 for the lot, and replacing the whole actuator would cost even more than that, especially if I wanted to replace all 5 for my trouble. Instead I bought a set of roll pins (https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0DFLHP2HB/?tag=gmtnation-20) and used a 5/64 x 1" for each gear.
After removing the cracked gear/hub from the assembly, I removed the gear from the hub and then rotated it so that the crack would end up about halfway between 9 and 12 o'clock when the gear is in its midrange position. In this position the crack would never come into contact with either the pot. gear or the idler so no worries of skipping or jumping or damage to the other gears. I then drilled the hole for the roll pin roughly 90 degrees from the crack (roughly being the key word here LOL). The hole should be about 1/8" in from the front edge of the gear; in that location the hole doesn't contact the narrow faced pot. gear and the idler gear has a wide enough face that the hole is irrelevant. Drill all the way through so the pin can be punched out if needed. Try to make sure the drill is lined up as close to center as possible--if it's too far off center then when it breaks through the center and starts into the other side of the metal hub it could pull the drill off center and cause problems getting the roll pin in. Ideally should use a drill press for this, trying to do it by hand probably will go badly. Then drive the pin all the way through evenly. When the pin is in the 1/8" location off the front edge there is no interference with anything as the door input shaft only goes part way in the other end.

Final assembly: rotate the pot. gear so that the 2 raised round bosses are horizontal and the lettering is at the top. Then work the repaired gear in so that the gear is midrange when meshed with the pot. gear (slots in hub end are vertically aligned). Then replace the idler gear. After this check the resistance between pin 7-9 and pin 9-10; they should be measuring roughly the same when the pot. gear is aligned correctly, about 4.5K ohm, if not then rotate the drive gear one tooth or whatever is needed. One exception to this is the recirculation door which does not use a pot. for positioning, just goes from end to end as needed so no gear alignment is needed.
After re-installing the actuators without connecting them, I re-attached the battery and then plugged the connectors in one at a time to verify that re-calibration goes through on each one. Perfect!
It took me about 6-7 hours to get to this point, tomorrow will be full dash re-assembly day. Bonus: I no longer have to be on pins and needles whenever I need to disconnect the battery any more, which is good because here in Arizona batteries only last 3-4 years in the heat so it's a regular thing.
At the tone the time will be: beer-thirty Mountain Time.










