The heater core is difficult to change on the Ford trucks. They have it buried in the plenum box and you have to remove the steering wheel, steering column, dash, evacuate the refrigerant system, drain the radiator, and remove the plenum box to get to the core. Replacing the core is easy, getting to it is a day's work. The Expedition is particularly difficult to get to. It is almost above the transmission tunnel and well buried behind the dash. The Expedition uses the same plenum box as the F150, so any information on that system applies to the Expedition/Navigator.
You need to be sure that the heater core is really the problem before tackling this job. If you have a pool of coolant on the floor, you'll have to go after the core. If the problem is lack of heat, there are some things you need to eliminate before tearing into the truck. You need to make sure that coolant is flowing through the core. Check the temperature of the heater hoses going into the firewall when the engine is cool and see if they warm up together as the engine warms up. If both hoses get hot at about the same rate, this is a good indication that coolant is flowing through the core. You can also remove the hoses and flush the core with a water hose splice from Home Depot and a water hose. Water should flow unobstructed through the core.
If it appears that coolant is flowing and you don't have obvious leaks, the next step is to check the blend door. This door controls the air flow through the heater core and failure is common on Ford trucks. When the door breaks, it can block the flow of air through the core and kill heat and will also have an impact on AC. If the system seems to work intermittently, it's a good indication that the door is broken and rattling around randomly blocking or opening the passage to the core.
For diagnostic information on how to check the operation of the blend door and a cheap easy fix, check the heatertreater listing on Ebay or the web site at heatertreater.net. The dealer fix for the blend door is basically the same procedure for replacing the heater core, so it will be expensive. The HeaterTreater alternative will solve the problem at a fraction of the cost and work and is well within the capability of the average shade tree mechanic.
To change the heater core in a 2000 Ford Expedition, first, disconnect the battery and drain the coolant from the radiator. Remove the dashboard and the center console to access the heater core housing. Disconnect the heater hoses from the core, unbolt the housing, and replace the old heater core with a new one. Reassemble by reversing the steps and refill the coolant before reconnecting the battery.
how do i change a heater core on a 2000 Chevy impalla
just splice the two heater hoses that go through to the heater core the together
How do you replace a heater core in a 1998 Ford Expedition?"
How do you replace a heater core in a 1998 ford expedition?"
the HEATER CORE can be removed by removing the dash. how do i ghange the dash
how do you change a heater core on a 2003 ss Monte Carlo
how to remove the lines from the heater core on a 2001 expedition
pull the dash
I have looked up time to change heater core on 2000 dodge caravan it said 2 hours. I have never done this so I need to know where to start?
most of the time it the heater control unit on the motor not the heater core had same problem
Remove the water supply hoses from your heater core. Remove the heater core retaining bolts. Reverse the process to install your new heater core.