In the twenty three years I've had this van I've never had to take out the entire front fascia, but this is how we did it.
Basically the whole thing is bolted to the front of the van at each side, and along the bottom of the windscreen where the condensation gathers and rusts it all - see previous blog.
It's necessary of course to remove the instrument panel, and disconnect the speedo cable.
There are dozens of wire bundles to undo but they are all on connectors, and every connector is either different or is keyed in some way, so there's no possibility of not knowing how they go back.
Look for the brown wire from the steering wheel to the horn, we missed that.
There are two metal support arms which bolt from the steering column bracket to the front of the van, either side of the brake and clutch fluid reservoir. They're hard to get at and you'll need to be careful not to damage the plastic reservoir. You just need to undo those arms and disconnect the bottom of the steering wheel shaft from the rubber mount near the brake pedal and you can take the entire assembly out.
You'll also need to pull the knobs off the heater controls, take the front off it, and remove the screws so that the heater control assembly stays behind. Apart from the screws at the front there is one round the corner on the steering wheeel side - that took us a while to discover. Much grovelling about trying to find out what was holding it all in, while trying not to break whatever it was.
It's a two person job to get it out, it's heavy.
Now there's a hex-headed clamp bolt you can undo to take the steering column off the bracket.
We could have done that before we took the assembly out, it would have made it lighter, but we didn't know.
If you ever just wanted the steering column out you could disconnect it at the bottom and then undo the hex-headed clamp bolt to remove the column leaving the bracket still attached to the fascia.
It will go back together!
There are a few things to do now that we have got this off.
For many years only two of the three heater controls have worked as the cable inner kept pulling out of the control lever because the associated cable and flap was old and stiff, and eventually the knob got lost.
We must take the heater to bits while we can and free all this up, and source a new knob.
The last time this heater control assembly went wrong was a hot summer day when the temperature knob came off and I had to drive back from Falkirk to Keith with the heater on full. Even with the windows open by the time I got home I was almost down to my underpants. You didn't really want to know that.

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