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'94 850 Glove Compartment frozen shut

Help, Advice and DIY Tutorials on Volvo's P80 platform cars -- Volvo's 1990s "bread and butter" cars -- powered by the ubiquitous and durable Volvo inline 5-cylinder engine.

1992 - 1997 850, including 850 R, 850 T-5R, 850 T-5, 850 GLT
1997 - 2000 S70, S70 AWD
1997 - 2000 V70, V70 AWD
1997 - 2000 V70-XC
1997 - 2004 C70

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yeagermeister
Posts: 85
Joined: 18 May 2005
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Location: richmond, va
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Post by yeagermeister »

White850Turbo wrote:Wow, now this little pic diagram thing you've done Yeagermeister should be pinned somewhere. Superb if I must say so myself. The glovebox problem seems to be rather common, so I'm sure this well help quite a few people with it.
hey- since mine already had 6 holes drilled in it, i figured it was easy enough for me to be the guinea pig....

sawing the loop doesn't look like it would be all that easy, and it destroys the ability to close and lock the glove box. this way you can still lock the glove box, though pushing from the outside with the coat hanger will still release it. quite a clever little mechanism they have inside that thing... one day i'll get around to replacing the whole glove box, but until then...
(the other) sean



'94 855 5-speed

'02 lifted Nissan XTERRA

yeagermeister
Posts: 85
Joined: 18 May 2005
Year and Model:
Location: richmond, va
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Post by yeagermeister »

White850Turbo wrote:...should be pinned somewhere. Superb if I must say so myself.
forgot to add- thanks!

and if it's going to get pinned i might try to get someone else to host the pics, as they're currently on my 4wd club's webspace. maybe either Matthew or Rich could set it up somewhere?
(the other) sean



'94 855 5-speed

'02 lifted Nissan XTERRA

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matthew1
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Joined: 14 September 2002
Year and Model: 850 T5, 1997
Location: Denver, Colorado, US
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Post by matthew1 »

Yea, I'll host the images and break out your tutorial onto its own page. Really great documentation, thanks!
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1998 V70, no dash lights on

1997 850 T5 [gone] w/ MSD ignition coil, Hallman manual boost controller, injectors, R bumper, OMP strut brace

2004 V70 R [gone]

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matthew1
Site Admin
Posts: 14478
Joined: 14 September 2002
Year and Model: 850 T5, 1997
Location: Denver, Colorado, US
Has thanked: 2654 times
Been thanked: 1247 times
Contact:

Post by matthew1 »

Making this a sticky until I make it a pge. :!:
Help keep MVS on the web -> click sponsors' links here on MVS when you buy from them.

Also -> Amazon link
. Click that when you go to buy something on Amazon and MVS gets a cut!

1998 V70, no dash lights on

1997 850 T5 [gone] w/ MSD ignition coil, Hallman manual boost controller, injectors, R bumper, OMP strut brace

2004 V70 R [gone]

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Waggs

Post by Waggs »

Hey.... I did the saw blade option. It was freakin' great! Single hacksaw blade with patience and it's open again. I just stopped by a U-Wrench-It salvage yard and pulled a good lock and latch. Paid $1.00 to enter the place and .93 cents for the two pieces I needed. $1.93 and I'm back in business. I'll be doing the odometer next......... LOL

moveoverbm

Post by moveoverbm »

Put a roled up towel on dashboard & use a tyer leaver on the end furthest


from the lock this will rip the inner section of the glove box lid (the bit you

wont see )and expose the lock mech .

You can then supper glue the inner section & lugs back up.

Look as good as new apart from the cup holder but works as well as it ever did.

The mech parts cost me

etzal

Post by etzal »

Followed yeagermeister's solution on the glovebox of our 95 850 except used top part of a nail instead of a screw. Soldered it. Thanks to his excellent diagram used a very small drill bit (1/16") and the hole is hardly visible. When you insert the wire to release the latch move wire upwards to rotate and lift the latch.

sstern

Post by sstern »

If you do not want to drill a hole in the glove box door face. Give this route a try. I actually pulled on the door enough to gain access to the latch bar assy ( where the lock hooks too ) and it is bolted to the top of the glove box. I used a pair of wire cutters and cut the latch bar. This will get the glove box open. I went to the dealership and it was a relatively cheap part. If i remember it was about $19.99. I know that seems expensive for a small piece of metal, but I don't have holes in my glove box door. This will still not fix the latch problem, but will get it open.

Volvo855
Posts: 1
Joined: 20 August 2009
Year and Model: Volvo 855
Location: Sweden

Post by Volvo855 »

Thanks for the tips, the description and the measurement where prefect for a Volvo 855 -95.
My problem was that the little lever made by aluminium used to drive the mechanism of the actual lock had been broken by metal fatiuge.
It was "easily" fixed by makeing new threads in the old aluminium peice and attaching a metal M3 screw (3 mm wide).
Se attached picture.
When you drill as the previous picture suggests, drill with a small bit, and insert a small metal-piece. I used a 4 mm drill and could have used a smaller one to make the job.
Check out the picture to se the fix of the M3 screw which replaced the pin.
gloveboxpin.jpg
gloveboxpin.jpg (22.77 KiB) Viewed 979 times

Volgrrr
Posts: 246
Joined: 13 September 2006
Year and Model: '95 T5 wagon
Location: Near Ararat, Victoria, Australia

Post by Volgrrr »

hey- since mine already had 6 holes drilled in it, i figured it was easy enough for me to be the guinea pig....
Why do you want to drill holes in your glove box and have it look poxy for ever and a day?
sawing the loop doesn't look like it would be all that easy, and it destroys the ability to close and lock the glove box.
Sawing apart the loop is very easy and then you simply purchase a new loop or repair the old one if funds are that tight.
this way you can still lock the glove box, though pushing from the outside with the coat hanger will still release it. quite a clever little mechanism they have inside that thing... one day i'll get around to replacing the whole glove box, but until then...
There is plenty of information on various forums (because it just so happens it is a very common problem) and I'm sure Ozark Lee posted a method on this very forum on how to cut the loop catch with the result that, after all the repair work had been completed, you couldn't tell the glove box had ever had any work done on it.

And the real benefit is this, there are no gaping ugly holes constantly staring back at you.
There are only two types of car owners - those who own Volvos and those who wish they did.

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