awesome video! this just happened to my 2003 toyota corolla and i was able to switch it myself after this video. i think the hardest part was finding the actual part near me haha. luckily i was able to squeeze my hands in without taking out the whole center piece. thanks 🙏🏻
Thanks for the super helpful video just did this repair only tip I have is to remove the center console depending on your hand size the cavity is small once you take the cover off removing the “cc” makes putting the bushing in way easier
Thanks for the video! I'm a bit surprised Toyota didn't put any clips on that metal pin to keep it from slipping off if the bushing fails. Mine was in little tiny pieces, I had to look at a parts diagram to tell that there was even supposed to be a bushing there. Dealer should have the part in 1-4 days, online price was $1.89. If anybody needs it faster, Amazon and NAPA have aftermarket versions available next-day (for $7+). No idea of the quality though, so I went with genuine Toyota for this. I think today was the first time my 2003 Toyota Corolla has ever let me sit somewhere other than my driveway. Fortunately, I could pop the cover off to get it into drive to go 2 miles back home without needing a tow.
Thank you so much! This just happened to our 2007 Pontiac Vibe. I was able to repair it myself because of your helpful video. Much appreciated.
Happy to hear you were able to get it done!
Take care,
-Dan
awesome video! this just happened to my 2003 toyota corolla and i was able to switch it myself after this video. i think the hardest part was finding the actual part near me haha. luckily i was able to squeeze my hands in without taking out the whole center piece. thanks 🙏🏻
@@ambuhflowers nice job! I knew it was possible to get it done without taking out the center cover. Glad the video was helpful!
Take care,
-Dan
Thanks for the super helpful video just did this repair only tip I have is to remove the center console depending on your hand size the cavity is small once you take the cover off removing the “cc” makes putting the bushing in way easier
@@TheDivado1 thanks for the helpful tip!
NIce work, thanks for the detailed video.
Thanks for the video! I'm a bit surprised Toyota didn't put any clips on that metal pin to keep it from slipping off if the bushing fails. Mine was in little tiny pieces, I had to look at a parts diagram to tell that there was even supposed to be a bushing there. Dealer should have the part in 1-4 days, online price was $1.89. If anybody needs it faster, Amazon and NAPA have aftermarket versions available next-day (for $7+). No idea of the quality though, so I went with genuine Toyota for this.
I think today was the first time my 2003 Toyota Corolla has ever let me sit somewhere other than my driveway. Fortunately, I could pop the cover off to get it into drive to go 2 miles back home without needing a tow.
Thank you so much for the video. You’re doing the lord’s work as they say.
Thanks for sharing your knowledge sir Godbless
Wait this is it my car did this today how is it so so simple to fix
Odometer stops at 299,999.99, really? What the fuck Toyota…
So if it stops how u know oil changes etc will the trip still work
Yes Trip A and Trip B both work. Use trip A for gas mileage and trip B will run for up to 10,000K before it resets itself to 0
Thence