Hi.
I'm Mike from 1A Auto.
We've been selling auto parts for over 30
years.
So we're going to remove the lower splashguard
on this CRV '09.
It's missing all the push-pins in the front.
If we had them, I'd remove them.
But I'm going to go in the other sequence
of how to remove the rest of it.
You have to go in the fender well to get the
two clamps up here.
There's one, here, a push-pin, and one here.
So I'm going to use my body clip tool, and
I'm just going to pry them out.
There's one and there's two.
So these are push pins I'm noticing are broken.
Someone broke the head off of them.
So obviously that's going to be really impossible
to grab.
So this one was accessible from up below,
and I just pushed down hard with my tool like
that and it came right out.
There's another in here that the head's broken
on it.
I don't think I'm going to be able to get
to it to push the pin out, so I'm going to
grab a pair of needle nose.
Whatever works for you.
Got to just really use your ingenuity.
There we go.
There's also a ten millimeter head bolt that
goes through the plastic.
That's not uncommon for these for the clamp
to spin on the other side, which this one
is doing.
I can feel it.
I just lucked out--I got it with my hand.
You might have to put a pair of pliers up
in there.
I got it.
See the clamp was broken.
The plastic broke right off.
So I got to hold that enough to spin it out.
And now we're just going to repeat the same
exact locations on the passenger side.
So once you remove that last bolt, you can
pull down your undercarriage shield and set
it aside.
So we're going to re-install our under frontage
shroud.
So this goes under this front plastic.
When I received it, it wasn't in the proper
place.
Here, look, you have eyelets that go in place
here.
And they snap in.
See a lot of these hanging down on people,
on their cars and stuff.
It's plastic and y'know, we got our great
roads of New England with potholes that are
wicked on the cars.
I'm going to try to use some of our salvaged
plastic push-pins, at least hold it up in
place.
There, now it's held in place and I'll just
use plastic ties, and see if I can maneuver,
fit them in there, or I can go buy some push
pins.
This one's broken, but what I'm going to do
is I'm going to get a flat-edge screwdriver
and I'm going to try to pry it open, get the
plastic piece that's broken out of there.
You just want to salvage this enough so that
it will try to keep it up.
There's three plastic ends here, so I'm going
to slide it right through one of them here,
and see if I can get it to stay so we can
try to keep the edge up here.
It's going to be easier than fishing a plastic
tie through.
Be careful not to pinch your fingers.
You have to go with the vehicle though.
Thanks for watching.
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service in the industry.
