Alright I've found the solution, the seatbelt connection has 2 wires leading to it, cut both wires and splice together, problem solved :D
You cant.
Put on your seatbelt. Now if the sensor is defective, take it back to the dealer. It is under warranty.
Unplug white connector under driver's seat. (The yellow connectors are for Airbag system). If you have heated seats the connector might be a compound connector and you just want to be sure you only unplug the one coming from the seatbelt area. Alternately, the seatbelt can be quickly plugged and unplugged at least 20 times in 30 seconds to disable the seatbelt chime. I believe this is done with key in on position. If the battery is disconnected, then the procedure will have to be done again.
Put on your seatbelt.
you wear the seatbelt,it should go off
A 1999 Dakota does not have a mass airflow sensor.A 1999 Dakota does not have a mass airflow sensor.
I assume you want to disable the sensor because you don't use your seatbelt? Drive with your seatbelt fastened. That should do the trick. Besides, it will save you life in an accident. And I believe that your airbag may not deploy if the seatbelt is not fastened. They are designed to work together to save your life. You *could* in theory bypass the switch, but I won't say how.(1) On January 25, 2010 at 4:27 pm User:Gregfloyd[0] said:I appreciate your concern, but actually I do drive with my seat belt on. My problem is that when I arrive home and my child is a sleep in the car and I'm in park the sensor goes off repeatedly and wakes her up. I can't take my seat belt off while the car is running. Other cars I have had the alarm will go off when you take the vehicle out of park. This one goes off non-stop as long as the car is running.Thanks
There are two possibilities for the 'receiver' if you are getting a flashing seatbelt light. First, there are wires under the seat that detect when someone is sitting on the seat and then there is a sensor in the seatbelt receiver piece (the part with the release button where you click it to open the seatbelt) that senses when the seatbelt is correctly closed. The most likely problem is that your sensor in the seatbelt receiver is simply worn out.
If you examine the buckle that you snap your seatbelt latch into, you will notice it has wires attached. That is where the sensor is.
The sensor is located in the seat. The problem is that if you unplug the sensor the vehicle will not start.
A 2006 Dakota does not have a mass airflow sensor.A 2006 Dakota does not have a mass airflow sensor.
A 1991 Dakota does not use a mass airflow sensor.A 1991 Dakota does not use a mass airflow sensor.