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Reviewed in Canada on May 20, 2025
Works great
Wayne Cassineri
Reviewed in the United States on April 12, 2025
These work excellent for the price. I installed them on a 2016 Ford expedition platinum rear trunk window. They work just as good if not better than OEM and you cannot beat the price.
EDGAR R ALVAREZ
Reviewed in the United States on June 18, 2024
Β
Customer
Reviewed in the United States on February 4, 2023
These glass lifters work very well. The materials used to make the metal clips that hold the ends of the lifters on the glass, are thin and cheaply made. They are easily deformed and could fail.
Mike in NC
Reviewed in the United States on December 9, 2023
Safety first - I recommend getting a telescoping pole to insert between the lift release handle at the bottom of the hatch (below the license plate) and the glass when it's open. Open the glass as high as it goes, then extend the pole into the area where the glass latch is and snug it up. Definitely DO NOT want to skip this step if you're changing these out yourself.The Change - To remove the old glass support strut, you need a medium width flat blade screwdriver, about 3/16", but you can angle a slightly wider one in the groove on there if it's got a reasonably sharp edge to it. You'll see a c-band clamp at the top where the strut connects and the bottom where it connects. You'll be displacing these *on the old struts only*. You don't do this on the new ones - they are going to just snap into place over the ball socket you will expose when you remove the old ones. Now, as you have loosened the bottom clamp, just pull it straight back toward you. Takes a slight bit of effort but it should pop right off with just a few pounds of pressure (you don't need a hammer; if you do, it means the clamp is still in place). Do the same at the top, but put your free arm up to catch the glass FIRST, in the event that you accidentally move the pole with the pull. The top one pulls to the outside, not backward. Snap the new one on, top then bottom is how I did it. Now... if you didn't open that glass high enough, you are going to find it extremely difficult to compress the strut to make it fit. Don't break the hinge, but push that glass on up there if the strut bottom doesn't line up with that ball down there. Done? Good. Now do the other side, and check your pole placement again before you start, just to be safe. One good strut generally isn't considered sufficient to hold the glass; that's why Ford put two on there when they built it.Review: These struts are *tight*, like as in super tight. They absolutely lift and hold that glass at its max extension, and it barely requires a finger to get it started lifting. I suspect over time they'll work in a bit, like the old ones did. The fit was excellent. The support strength was more than sufficient to hold the glass up. That thing where you had to be careful walking around the back with the glass up because it might sag and hit you in the eyeball? That's a thing of the past. This is a good set, definitely worth the money. And if you spend more than 5 minutes installing it, you're either going purposely slow or doing it wrong. For those of you who need to see it done before trying it, there's a 3 minute youtube video and you can just search 'change glass strut 200x expedition' like I did.Highly recommended.
Customer
Reviewed in Canada on April 5, 2023
It was fitting good to π
Chris
Reviewed in the United States on March 2, 2021
Easiest thing you can do for your car or truck!
michelle potter
Reviewed in the United States on April 22, 2021
Nothing
aaaaaa
Reviewed in the United States on February 22, 2020
My old ones weren't working while on my 2007 Ford expedition so I replaced them with these ones and it work out while also noticed the difference right away..
Fred Erickson
Reviewed in the United States on February 13, 2020
Worked as advertised.
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