Opening the hood of your Ford Transit is as simple as pulling the hood release lever inside the car and then sliding the catch just above the grille to the left.
From changing the engine oil
to topping up the coolant
, a lot of essential maintenance takes place inside the engine compartment of your van. Before any of that can happen, you need to know how to open the hood of a Ford Transit. Let’s get started! Where is the hood release on a Ford Transit?
The hood release lever is to the left of the steering wheel on the underside of the instrument panel. It’s a large plastic square printed with the icon of a car with its hood popped up.
How to open the hood on a Ford Transit
According to the official Ford owner manuals
, you can open the Ford Transit's hood with these easy steps: Pull the catch to the left. Stand at the front of the van (where the hood meets the body panel) and find a black plastic arm. Slide your fingers under the hood—you should be able to feel it.
Open the hood. Raise the hood and unfold the metal strut tucked to the right of the engine compartment. Slide the top of it into the groove on the underside of the hood to prop it open.
Once you’re done performing maintenance or simply taking a look, remove the strut and fold it back into the groove where you found it. Lower the hood until it’s 8 to 12 inches above the rim of the engine compartment, then let it go so it falls shut.
Double-check that it’s secure—you don’t want the hood flipping up while you’re driving!
How to repair the Ford Transit hood release
If you have issues with your hood, knowing how a car hood latch works
will help you pinpoint the problem. Check out this table with potential hood release problems and symptoms: | | |
---|
| | |
| Deep dents, warping, or rust | The hood is too deformed to open |
| | Release lever is stuck. The attached cable is caught or rusted |
| Lever moves freely without any weight to it | Attached cable is cut or disconnected |
| | Hood latch is rusted, misaligned, or caught |
| Catch moves freely but the hood doesn’t open | End of the catch has been snapped off inside lock |
| Hood opens with difficulty | |
Fixing a Ford Transit hood latch that won't open can cost between $100 and $350, depending on the trim. Parts account for the majority of the cost. For example, if you need a new hood release cable, it only costs about $150 to $175. However, if the hood needs to be banged back into shape, you’ll receive an expensive bill at the body shop.
One way to avoid a costly repair is to have a robust car insurance
policy to help you cover it. Whether or not your policy covers a busted hood latch depends on how it was broken in the first place. If your grille was damaged in a crash, you could file a claim under collision coverage
, even if the accident was your fault. But if a tree fell on it, that’s a job for comprehensive coverage
. Sadly, few policies will pay for repairs resulting from neglect or rust.
"Jerry
saved me so much time and money! I went from $230 to $150, still with full coverage! The whole process was amazingly simple!” —Ronda S.
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