Chandlerazman
Active member
Okay, So today was a beautiful day and my wife wanted to go out shopping. My criteria for the day was to get home early to have plenty of time to convert my van to fog lights. Before you know it, it was 4:30pm when we got home. I was going to get these lights in no matter what. I've never taken this van apart before so I had no clue what I was going in for. Aside from that, the daylight was growing short and this project had to be done as the van was needed for tomorrow mornings busy schedule.
Before I begin, let me say that all the parts were collected in advance with much research. There are no wires available to connect into the fog lights if your van didn't come with them from the factory. In a post I wrote a while ago, I had pre-wired the fog light circuits into my van using an ignition key controlled relay and 14 gauge wiring fused and tapped from the under seat power tap. I can run my fog lights independently of the headlights so long as the engine or key is in the run position.
Now to the fun stuff. The grille took four torx screws and four lock tabs at the base to remove. It literally came out in under 3 minutes flat. (Mind you, I've done no studying up on this!) Next to be removed were the torx screws that hold the bumper step hole to the chassis (Front of van over license plate) Next remove the chrome license plate surround and finally two large bolts under the chrome plate surround. The rest gets easy...Pull the push pin retainers out of the outer perimeter of the bumper and at the bottom edge. There are about 10 (five per side) I then removed the torx screws securing the grille trim pieces from the body. With a helper (wife in my case) pull the bumper cover away from the van. There are plastic snap clips securing the fender to the trim pieces which broke off in my case but had little if any structural deviance.
Here's the nose after all of the above are done. This took about 20 minutes as I made sure everything was removed to pull the cover off.
The old bumper has no provisions to secure the fog lights and no hole in the cover to allow for access to the adjustment height screw on the fog light assembly. Here you can see the difference between the two.
Old bumper cover (non-fog lights)
New cover with fog light provisions
An all important part forgotten is the clips and screws to secure the fog light assemblies to the bumper cover.
Here is the fog light assembly installed in the bumper cover
Here is the bumper with fog lights and trim pieces installed and ready to go back on the van.
I bought H-11 pigtails from an online supplier. Google H-11 pigtails and see what you get. I grounded one leg to the chassis and the other is my power feed.
Here are the tails you will need to get. Don't try to get them from the dealer unless you want a second mortgage! They can be had for about $20 a pair with shipping from online sources.
All wired up and bumper reinstalled following the reversal of removal. The side of the bumper cover needs to slide over a retaining "track" in each side just forward of the wheel wells. Best down with the aid of another person on the opposite side.
The magic starts with the amber lit toggle switch on the left next to the headlight switch... (file photo from another day) The other switch is for the fluorescent cargo lighting.
Here is the fog lights in operation with just the parking lights on. The reflection is of red tape on my gate...
And finally the front view after I washed "Huey"
The whole process took me about two hours since I had to solder my H-11 pigtails to the wiring I had previously ran a month ago. Remember, the van had no fog light wiring from the factory.
Total cost for this project....
Bumper cover with fog light provisions - $307.00
Pair of factory fog lights - $ 186.00
Fog light retaining hardware - $17.40
Wire, pig tails and misc. stuff - $32.00
This was my grand total - $542.40
Your pricing may vary due to tax rates, dealer pricing and so on. I wanted this to look factory and not as an afterthought. My wife didn't mind my craziness as the cost of this was done over a period of two months. I am sure this would have cost alot more If I let the dealer do it. Aside from that, it is rewarding to do it yourself, do it right and not leave any "extra" screws laying around.
Before I begin, let me say that all the parts were collected in advance with much research. There are no wires available to connect into the fog lights if your van didn't come with them from the factory. In a post I wrote a while ago, I had pre-wired the fog light circuits into my van using an ignition key controlled relay and 14 gauge wiring fused and tapped from the under seat power tap. I can run my fog lights independently of the headlights so long as the engine or key is in the run position.
Now to the fun stuff. The grille took four torx screws and four lock tabs at the base to remove. It literally came out in under 3 minutes flat. (Mind you, I've done no studying up on this!) Next to be removed were the torx screws that hold the bumper step hole to the chassis (Front of van over license plate) Next remove the chrome license plate surround and finally two large bolts under the chrome plate surround. The rest gets easy...Pull the push pin retainers out of the outer perimeter of the bumper and at the bottom edge. There are about 10 (five per side) I then removed the torx screws securing the grille trim pieces from the body. With a helper (wife in my case) pull the bumper cover away from the van. There are plastic snap clips securing the fender to the trim pieces which broke off in my case but had little if any structural deviance.
Here's the nose after all of the above are done. This took about 20 minutes as I made sure everything was removed to pull the cover off.
The old bumper has no provisions to secure the fog lights and no hole in the cover to allow for access to the adjustment height screw on the fog light assembly. Here you can see the difference between the two.
Old bumper cover (non-fog lights)
New cover with fog light provisions
An all important part forgotten is the clips and screws to secure the fog light assemblies to the bumper cover.
Here is the fog light assembly installed in the bumper cover
Here is the bumper with fog lights and trim pieces installed and ready to go back on the van.
I bought H-11 pigtails from an online supplier. Google H-11 pigtails and see what you get. I grounded one leg to the chassis and the other is my power feed.
Here are the tails you will need to get. Don't try to get them from the dealer unless you want a second mortgage! They can be had for about $20 a pair with shipping from online sources.
All wired up and bumper reinstalled following the reversal of removal. The side of the bumper cover needs to slide over a retaining "track" in each side just forward of the wheel wells. Best down with the aid of another person on the opposite side.
The magic starts with the amber lit toggle switch on the left next to the headlight switch... (file photo from another day) The other switch is for the fluorescent cargo lighting.
Here is the fog lights in operation with just the parking lights on. The reflection is of red tape on my gate...
And finally the front view after I washed "Huey"
The whole process took me about two hours since I had to solder my H-11 pigtails to the wiring I had previously ran a month ago. Remember, the van had no fog light wiring from the factory.
Total cost for this project....
Bumper cover with fog light provisions - $307.00
Pair of factory fog lights - $ 186.00
Fog light retaining hardware - $17.40
Wire, pig tails and misc. stuff - $32.00
This was my grand total - $542.40
Your pricing may vary due to tax rates, dealer pricing and so on. I wanted this to look factory and not as an afterthought. My wife didn't mind my craziness as the cost of this was done over a period of two months. I am sure this would have cost alot more If I let the dealer do it. Aside from that, it is rewarding to do it yourself, do it right and not leave any "extra" screws laying around.