honda odyssey sliding door for sale

honda odyssey sliding door for sale

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Honda Odyssey Sliding Door For Sale

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New (15) from $38.00 + $6.29 shipping Genuine Honda 72561-SHJ-A21 Slide Door Roller Assembly, LeftDetailsGenuine Honda 72521-SHJ-A21 Slide Door Roller Assembly, Right FREE Shipping. DetailsPhgiveu 10mm Push-type Nylon Bumper Fender Flare Fastener Rivet Clips, 40 Pcs / Pack 5.6 x 2.2 x 2.2 inches 4.7 out of 5 stars #7,462 in Automotive (See top 100) 12.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies) Amazon only ships this item within the contiguous 48 United States. Other Sellers on Amazon may ship this item to Alaska, Hawaii and US Territories. Manufacturer’s warranty can be requested from customer service. Click here to make a request to customer service. If you are a seller for this product, would you like to suggest updates through seller support? Would you like to tell us about a lower price? Available for 2005-2010 Honda Odyssey 5 star86%4 star8%3 star3%2 star2%1 star1%See all verified purchase reviewsTop Customer ReviewsWorks great.




Tip- don't remove the baracketgreat productPerfectGenuine part, as advertised, arrived quickly.Part was exactly what I needed; wifey was overjoyed that the repair for our minivan door cost <$50 and about 20 minutes of my time, vs $$$ at the dealer. (replaced both sides for <$100. other side from different seller is Genuine Honda 72521-SHJ-A21 Slide Door Roller Assembly, Right)Note that this is HALF of the bracket. Installation requires the reuse of the pin and pin retaining clip, in addition to the half of the bracket that is bolted to the door. The part I received included the pivot spring and bushings. I ended up not disassembling the interior to access the drive cable tension adjustment, as my 2012 Odyssey had a different assembly than the YouTube videos described. There was enough give/stretch in the cable to enable installation from the exterior (although it did require a little Beast Mode and a good set of needle nose pliers to grasp/twist the cable end).There is a great how-to video on youtubeWorks great!




See all customer images Set up an Amazon Giveaway Learn more about Amazon GiveawayRemember When the Honda Odyssey Didn't Have Sliding Doors? These days, we take for granted that the Honda Odyssey is a popular minivan owned by many families who attend a wide range of activities, such as soccer and oboe practices. These days, we take for granted that the Odyssey will be on your shopping list if you're looking for a minivan. These days, the Odyssey is one of the best people movers on the market.It wasn't always like that. The Honda Odyssey used to be weird.To conjure a time when the Odyssey was weird, you must bring yourself back to 1995, when the minivan market was completely owned by Chrysler and all minivans only had a sliding door on the passenger side. Young people today will think this is completely insane. Why didn't they have doors on both sides? I have no idea. It made no sense, even then. It was the '90s. Nobody knew what was going on. Anyway, Honda decided they wanted a piece of the Chrysler minivan action, so they debuted a van in 1995 called the Odyssey.




As I recall, everyone was excited. We can finally buy a minivan! With all the practicality we like! And so, consumers everywhere lined up for this new Honda minivan to sweep the nation.Then, they actually saw it.The biggest problem with the original Odyssey was Honda's engine lineup. At the time, Honda wasn't making a V6 bigger than 2.7 liters, and they inexplicably decided not to install it in the Odyssey. Instead, they gave the Odyssey a 2.2-liter 4-cylinder that made 140 horsepower. By comparison, the Odyssey that came out just 10 years later in 2005 had 255 hp, which is an increase of more than 80 percent. If Honda keeps escalating Odyssey horsepower at this rate, the next-generation version should pack 460 ponies. So, you have a 140-hp engine, which means you have to make a very small vehicle or it won't be able to climb hills. The '95 Odyssey was pretty small, and the interior was pretty cramped (though, to Honda's credit, the original Odyssey did have 3-row seating), which was made even worse when Honda installed normal rear doors, not sliding doors, like most minivans.




And then, things got weirder. Despite the fact the original Odyssey clearly wasn't competitive, Isuzu decided to join the party. In exchange for giving Honda the Isuzu Trooper to use as the Acura SLX and the Isuzu Rodeo to use as the Honda Passport, Honda gave Isuzu the Odyssey. The result was the Isuzu Oasis, which was sold from 1996 to 1999. I believe there are precisely nine of them still running.Of course, the Odyssey was eventually redesigned for the 1999 model year into much of the van it is today: the V6-powered, dual sliding-doored, highly convenience-featured family hauler we all know and love. But, for a few years there in the '90s, it was really weird.MORE FROM OVERSTEER:Ask Doug: Should I Buy a Used Electric Vehicle?I Took My Aston Martin to CarMax for an AppraisalThe Porsche Cayenne Transsyberia Was ... BizarreFind a Honda Odyssey for sale Used & new (6) from $28.30 Available from these sellers. Keyless Entry Remote Key Fob Clicker for 2004 Honda Odyssey With Automatic Power Sliding Door Opener




3 x 2.5 x 0.5 inches FCC OUCG8D-440H-A & PART # 72147-S0X-A02 5.0 out of 5 stars #334,789 in Automotive (See top 100) #4,152 in Automotive > Interior Accessories > Antitheft > Keyless Entry #12,437 in Automotive > Replacement Parts > Lighting & Electrical > Electrical Price INCLUDES programming instructions for training the vehicle to recognize the remote. This remote will only operate on vehicles already equipped with a keyless entry system. 5 star100%See all verified purchase reviewsTop Customer ReviewsI thought the instruction were very clear and easy to understand02 Honda Odyssey Works!Five StarsFantasticFive StarsWorks like promisedFive StarsPaid less than purchasing at dealership See and discover other items: remote car door opener, honda key replacementThere is no better way to transport a family than a minivan, unless, of course, you’ve got something heavy to tow or you live in a region where all-wheel drive and raised ground clearance are necessities.




And among minivans, for quite some time now, there has been no better choice than a Honda Odyssey. Chrysler might dispute this, and given just how good the 2017 Pacifica is, such disagreement carries legitimate merit. Even now, following Honda’s reveal of the redesigned 2018 Odyssey, the Pacifica remains compelling, especially in plug-in electric hybrid format. You might have trouble spotting the new 2018 Odyssey at a glance, given that it uses similar design themes to the one that’s been around most of this decade. Nevertheless, the new 2018 Honda Odyssey is poised to lead its segment in terms of sales to actual retail customers like you and me. Honda’s reputation for reliability, coupled with brand loyalty, would alone keep showrooms stocked with Odyssey buyers. Add the long list of improvements that will accompany the next-generation Odyssey when it goes on sale in the spring of 2017, and you can bet Honda won’t have any trouble moving this angular chunk of metal to people who refuse to be defined by the “active lifestyle” muckety-muck used to describe buyers of crossover SUVs.




Integrating the sliding door tracks into the beltline trim beneath the rear windows gives the new 2018 Honda Odyssey a cleaner appearance. Sporting evolutionary instead of revolutionary styling, the new Odyssey is instantly familiar, requiring no more than a glance to identify it as Honda’s minivan. It employs styling cues that first debuted back in 2010 when the polarizing 2011 Odyssey design went on sale, cleaned up, sharpened and modernized. While the Oddy’s looks appear decidedly less odd, it is important to remember that familiarity breeds indifference. There’s something funky going on with the van’s profile, bordering on Mazda 5 weirdness depending on the light and angle. The good news is that the sliding side door tracks are now integrated with the van’s “lightning bolt” beltline, and the Odyssey no longer appears to be two different vehicles that met a Sawzall and then a surgeon – in that order. Equipped with 8-passenger seating, the 2018 Honda Odyssey offers a multi-configurable second-row seating area.




Inside, Honda installs more soft-touch materials than before, and equips the Odyssey with black carpets and seat belts that better hide stains. And minivans collect stains. New stain-resistant leather is also available, and the HondaVac vacuum cleaner returns for an encore. Eight-passenger seating is standard, and new Magic Slide second-row seats allow for different configurations. For example, you can slide the seats forward to position a rear-facing child safety seat closer to Mom and Dad. You can slide them back to maximize legroom. You can remove the center seating position and slide the resulting captain’s chairs together, putting kids into a safer position farther from the sliding doors. You can move just one seat toward the middle, creating a large walk-through to the third-row seat. Up front, a large center storage console separates the driver and passenger. Covering the storage bin, a smooth tamboured cover is designed to resist collection of crumbs, dirt and detritus.




Honda has also taken steps to quiet the Odyssey’s interior. Historically, this minivan has suffered from significant wind and road noise, making long trips tiring. With this redesign, Honda adds triple door seals, sound deadening materials, acoustic windshield and side window glass, and Active Sound Control. The result, according to the automaker, is the quietest interior in the minivan segment. Honda also claims that due to a revised rear suspension design, the 2018 Odyssey provides the largest amount of space behind its third-row seat. However, official cargo volume measurements were not available when the minivan debuted at the 2017 Detroit Auto Show. Safety-related enhancements help the 2018 Odyssey to better avoid collisions, and to protect occupants when a crash occurs. Honda constructs the 2018 Odyssey around a next-generation Advanced Compatibility Engineering (ACE) architecture that is designed to do a better job of dispersing crash energy away from the occupant compartment in the event of a collision.




Of course, avoiding a collision in the first place is always preferable, and with the redesigned Odyssey, Honda takes a big leap forward over the previous version of its minivan. Every 2018 Odyssey except for the base LX trim level will include Honda Sensing, a suite of driver assistance and collision avoidance systems. They include forward collision warning with automatic emergency braking, lane departure warning and lane keeping assist, and a lane departure prevention system called Road Departure Mitigation. Accompanying these Honda Sensing systems, all but the base Odyssey LX are also equipped with a blind spot monitoring system with rear cross-traffic alert. Depending on the trim level, Odyssey buyers can also obtain automatic high-beam headlights, rain-sensing wipers, and front and rear parking assist sensors. CabinTalk – it’s not a dating app for women who like men with beards, flannel shirts and long rifles. Some families prefer conversation, “I Spy” games, and to talk about the passing landscape during a road trip, while others would rather plug-in and tune out.




Honda accommodates both approaches, and makes it much easier for parents to communicate with movie-watching youngsters and to referee squabbles. Starting at the beginning, all versions of the minivan except for the Odyssey LX are equipped with a new Display Audio infotainment system with an 8-inch touchscreen. It has a volume knob, it runs on Honda-developed software, and it supports system updates via Wi-Fi or the USB port whenever necessary. Additional highlights include upgraded satellite radio, HD Radio, access to Pandora music streaming, Apple CarPlay and Android Auto smartphone integration, a 4G LTE Wi-Fi internet connection, and wireless device charging capability. The infotainment system provides a new suite of applications, including a CabinControl app that allows Odyssey occupants to control the infotainment system, the climate system, and the navigation system from their smartphones. This app also supports a Social Play List, a virtual jukebox of sorts that allows each person aboard the Odyssey to submit favorite songs to a compiled group play list.




The rear seat entertainment system installs a 10.2-inch display screen on the ceiling of the minivan. It features headphones, HDMI video gaming jacks, and can stream video via the onboard Wi-Fi connection or a smartphone data plan. An app called “How Much Farther” keeps kids apprised of the remaining distance in the journey, though anyone with a child realizes that this is not going to cut down on repeated questions of: “Are we there yet?” Even when your adorable offspring have their headphones on and are singing “How Far I’ll Go” at the tops of their little lungs, you’ll be able to get their attention in a calm, cool and collected manner. Thank you, CabinTalk technology, which feeds a parent’s voice to rear passengers via the rear speakers and, yes, the headphones. CabinWatch is also new, sounding like the name of a really crappy TV show in which the stars get bundled up in flannel shirts and L.L. Bean boots rather than dressed down into lifeguarding suits.




In reality, this is a camera system that gives Mom and Dad a video view of what’s going on in the second- and third-row seats. The image is displayed on the infotainment screen, providing evidence that yes, your children do lie to you. All of the time. Nobody buys a minivan because they want to have fun behind the steering wheel. Honda improves the 2018 Odyssey in this regard, anyway. With this redesign, the 2018 Odyssey moves to the same platform that underpins the Acura MDX, Honda Pilot, and Honda Ridgeline. Weight drops up to 96 pounds, depending on the trim level, and the minivan boasts a 44 percent improvement in torsional rigidity. Not that minivans are supposed to be enjoyable to drive, but this change certainly helps in that regard. So does the new Agile Handling Assist technology, a more responsive electric steering system, more powerful brakes, and a revised rear suspension design that Honda says improves the Odyssey’s ride and handling. A new direct-injected 3.5-liter V-6 engine summons 280 horsepower, a 32-pony increase over the previous Odyssey.




Cylinder deactivation technology, active grille shutters, and new transmissions help the minivan to achieve what Honda claims will be best-in-class fuel economy ratings. A 9-speed automatic transmission powers the Odyssey’s front wheels, and in upper trim levels, Honda introduces a new 10-speed automatic transmission. Both are shifted using a collection of buttons and switches located on the dashboard. The redesigned 2018 Honda Odyssey is better than ever, but it still might not topple the Chrysler Pacifica from the top of Minivan Mountain. Undoubtedly, the 2018 Odyssey is best minivan Honda has ever built. But, is it the best minivan? A test drive and family shuttling will help to determine that, but given just how good a package the Pacifica is, especially in plug-in hybrid format, Honda might still have some work cut out for it. Did you find this article helpful? If so, please share it using the "Join the Conversation" buttons below, and thank you for visiting Daily News Autos.

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