Cartoon Network

30 April 2012

Re: [DIY] Re: Automotive air filters

 

your cabin air filter is behind the glove box, the glove door and it's insert has to be removed.where your should see it.


From: hammersjsl <hammersjsl@mindspring.com>
To: DoIt_Yourself@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Thursday, April 26, 2012 2:47 PM
Subject: [DIY] Re: Automotive air filters

 
Cabin air filters can be all over the place...I think it's behind the glove compartment on my Jeep Grand Cherokee (no big deal) but it's behind the gas pedal on my Volvo S40 and you have to remove the gas pedal to get to it. Fortunately for the S40 I already had it done under the maintenance plan at no additional cost. My guess is that will run me a couple hundred when I have to pay for it.

--- In DoIt_Yourself@yahoogroups.com, "resawd2012" <resawd2012@...> wrote:
>
> Got an oil change the other day at a dealership. The service manager informed me that my engine air cleaner and my cabin air filter needed to be changed. To the tune of $105 which I politely refused. Well, maybe what I told him he could do with his $105 charge wasn't to polite. I figured that even at 78 and with a cane I could change a couple $15 to $20 myself. The engine air cleaner was easy, it just sat there in plain sight when I popped the hood. But does anyone know where in the world is the cabin air filter on a 2008 Honda Civic? I looked all over under the hood and under the dash but could see nothing that looked like a filter.
>



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1 comment:

  1. Reusable air filters increase power, prolong engine life and improve fuel economy. Other than paying out more claims to interchange your air filter every several months and dealing in the hassle of installing an air filter, these lifetime air filters simply need to have a good cleaning, and they’ll be ready to go again. Good for the environment.

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