- Nov 2, 2009
- 2,322
- 14
- 81
A few days ago, I noticed that my driver's side power door/window switches were sagging in their housing so much that when I tried to press one of the button, all I did was push the switch cluster down.
I had a chance to look at it today, and found that one of the threaded cylinders that the switch cluster was screwed into had snapped off. The threaded cylinder is part of the molded plastic housing that the switch cluster sits in.
(Sorry if my terminology is off. Auto body was never my thing
)
Is there a cheap way to fix this? It looks like something that superglue might be able to fix, but I have no idea of superglue would hold up to the stresses that a car door endures.
If it can't be practically repaired, where can I get a replacement (preferably cheap) other than a dealer or a junkyard? A quick peek on O'Reilly Auto Parts didn't show any interior body parts for sale, but I may not have been looking in the right place.
The car is a 2002 Toyota Corolla LE.
Broken part:
I had a chance to look at it today, and found that one of the threaded cylinders that the switch cluster was screwed into had snapped off. The threaded cylinder is part of the molded plastic housing that the switch cluster sits in.
(Sorry if my terminology is off. Auto body was never my thing
Is there a cheap way to fix this? It looks like something that superglue might be able to fix, but I have no idea of superglue would hold up to the stresses that a car door endures.
If it can't be practically repaired, where can I get a replacement (preferably cheap) other than a dealer or a junkyard? A quick peek on O'Reilly Auto Parts didn't show any interior body parts for sale, but I may not have been looking in the right place.
The car is a 2002 Toyota Corolla LE.
Broken part:
