> Wow! Great resource. Thanks for the tip!
>
[quoted text clipped - 16 lines]
>>>it is and how to get to it to replace it. I'm not optimistic this will fix
>>>his problem, but for $17 and a little effort it seems worth a try.
>I beleve the owner manual tells you where and how
Thanks, but after seeing the MicronAire site and reading the procedure
involved in changing the cabin air filters on the Accord (requiring
physical removal of the entire glove box), there is no way on God's green
Earth that this was intended to be a "user-serviceable" item.
zonie - 18 Jul 2005 01:10 GMT
I just changed the cabin filter in my 04 Accord. It is behind the glove box
There is a plastic arm on the right side of the door that keeps it from
opening too far. It has a hook end on the door side that unclips from the
door. You then push in on each side of the glove box to get it to
completely release. You can see the 2 clips that hold the filter in from
there. The 04 Accord has one big filter. Whole job takes 3 min. Scott
Elmo P. Shagnasty - 18 Jul 2005 02:26 GMT
> >I beleve the owner manual tells you where and how
>
> Thanks, but after seeing the MicronAire site and reading the procedure
> involved in changing the cabin air filters on the Accord (requiring
> physical removal of the entire glove box), there is no way on God's green
> Earth that this was intended to be a "user-serviceable" item.
That's exactly right. It's a repair procedure, really, not intended for
the end user.
Which is a damn shame. Again, Honda beancounters are probably
responsible for this. As bad as VW is, at least they go it right on the
98 Jetta: the air filter is right under the hood, where the outside air
intake is for the cabin. Easy to change.
John Horner - 18 Jul 2005 03:07 GMT
>>I beleve the owner manual tells you where and how
>
> Thanks, but after seeing the MicronAire site and reading the procedure
> involved in changing the cabin air filters on the Accord (requiring
> physical removal of the entire glove box), there is no way on God's green
> Earth that this was intended to be a "user-serviceable" item.
Oh, BS. I did it and it is easy. Yes, I would agree that Honda should
have made user service of this item easier by putting a door inside the
back of the glove box (like GM did on our '02 Olds van), but it really
is not big deal.
Kind of funny that GM's design is more user friendly though, eh?
John