Higher_Ground
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- J. T.
- Joined
- Jun 10, 2020
- Threads
- 7
- Messages
- 485
- Reaction score
- 355
- Location
- South Carolina
- Vehicle(s)
- 2020 Gator Sport S
OK, bear with me as I try to explain this in words. I think I figured out mechanically what I was doing wrong, and maybe it'll help with others.
The two little black nubs on the female connector that snap into place in the two slots of the male plug when you first attach the plugs together are key. These are not the two on the sides that fit into the lever, these are much smaller and on the same side of the plug. Once the two nubs fit into the slot the plastic part of the plugs are connected, but the pins are not.
At this point some people have tried to "manually insert the pins" by continuing to push the plugs together, sometimes in conjunction with moving the white lever. Others were just moving the white lever, presumably while pushing the plugs together. This may work for some, but I always felt resistance even when nothing was bent.
So yesterday I'm at this step and I think to "try again" and sort of pull back on the plugs, but not hard enough for those two little black nubs to come out of the slot. I see the white part of the plug that covers the pins fall back into place, and all the resistance disappeared. I could engage and move the lever easily, which wasn't the case before.
I went around did the same thing with the other door - pulled the plugs apart slightly once connected and it closed really smoothly. Who knows why, but that seems to make everything line up properly for a change.
The two little black nubs on the female connector that snap into place in the two slots of the male plug when you first attach the plugs together are key. These are not the two on the sides that fit into the lever, these are much smaller and on the same side of the plug. Once the two nubs fit into the slot the plastic part of the plugs are connected, but the pins are not.
At this point some people have tried to "manually insert the pins" by continuing to push the plugs together, sometimes in conjunction with moving the white lever. Others were just moving the white lever, presumably while pushing the plugs together. This may work for some, but I always felt resistance even when nothing was bent.
So yesterday I'm at this step and I think to "try again" and sort of pull back on the plugs, but not hard enough for those two little black nubs to come out of the slot. I see the white part of the plug that covers the pins fall back into place, and all the resistance disappeared. I could engage and move the lever easily, which wasn't the case before.
I went around did the same thing with the other door - pulled the plugs apart slightly once connected and it closed really smoothly. Who knows why, but that seems to make everything line up properly for a change.
Sponsored