Ignition Switch Replaced, OLD Keys Work...
#1
Ignition Switch Replaced, OLD Keys Work...
Greetings,
Great forum you have here!
I have a 2002 Impala that was subject to the Ignition Switch Recall as issued by GM. I dropped the vehicle off. The Dealership had the vehicle for two months or so. I gave them one key.
I received a telephone call the other morning from the Service Manager of the Chevrolet Dealership who told me that the repair was made and to "...be sure to throw away your old keys". Made sense to me since the new switch would require a new key, correct?
By sheer accident this morning I put one of the OLD keys in and the vehicle started. I tried the second old key and it fired up as well.
So, I have two new keys that came with the new switch, and two old keys that I had prior to the replacement of the switch.
What are the odds of the old keys fitting this new switch?
Many thanks!
Great forum you have here!
I have a 2002 Impala that was subject to the Ignition Switch Recall as issued by GM. I dropped the vehicle off. The Dealership had the vehicle for two months or so. I gave them one key.
I received a telephone call the other morning from the Service Manager of the Chevrolet Dealership who told me that the repair was made and to "...be sure to throw away your old keys". Made sense to me since the new switch would require a new key, correct?
By sheer accident this morning I put one of the OLD keys in and the vehicle started. I tried the second old key and it fired up as well.
So, I have two new keys that came with the new switch, and two old keys that I had prior to the replacement of the switch.
What are the odds of the old keys fitting this new switch?
Many thanks!
#2
Greetings,
Great forum you have here!
I have a 2002 Impala that was subject to the Ignition Switch Recall as issued by GM. I dropped the vehicle off. The Dealership had the vehicle for two months or so. I gave them one key.
I received a telephone call the other morning from the Service Manager of the Chevrolet Dealership who told me that the repair was made and to "...be sure to throw away your old keys". Made sense to me since the new switch would require a new key, correct?
By sheer accident this morning I put one of the OLD keys in and the vehicle started. I tried the second old key and it fired up as well.
So, I have two new keys that came with the new switch, and two old keys that I had prior to the replacement of the switch.
What are the odds of the old keys fitting this new switch?
Many thanks!
Great forum you have here!
I have a 2002 Impala that was subject to the Ignition Switch Recall as issued by GM. I dropped the vehicle off. The Dealership had the vehicle for two months or so. I gave them one key.
I received a telephone call the other morning from the Service Manager of the Chevrolet Dealership who told me that the repair was made and to "...be sure to throw away your old keys". Made sense to me since the new switch would require a new key, correct?
By sheer accident this morning I put one of the OLD keys in and the vehicle started. I tried the second old key and it fired up as well.
So, I have two new keys that came with the new switch, and two old keys that I had prior to the replacement of the switch.
What are the odds of the old keys fitting this new switch?
Many thanks!
#3
Are the keys identical?
except for the key hole on the end? Then the work was performed.
More Details on GM's Latest Ignition-Related Recall - KickingTires
except for the key hole on the end? Then the work was performed.
More Details on GM's Latest Ignition-Related Recall - KickingTires
#4
Are the keys identical?
except for the key hole on the end? Then the work was performed.
More Details on GM's Latest Ignition-Related Recall - KickingTires
except for the key hole on the end? Then the work was performed.
More Details on GM's Latest Ignition-Related Recall - KickingTires
I'm not seeing much of a difference between the two.
Again, thank you very much!
#5
Thank you for taking the time to reply. The keys are below. the top key is the original one, the bottom the new one. When you say 'key hole' should there be a literal hole in the key or (as shown) in the plastic at top?
I'm not seeing much of a difference between the two.
Again, thank you very much!
I'm not seeing much of a difference between the two.
Again, thank you very much!
If you read the article I linked to, it explains the wide hole is being replaced with the narrow hole version, so the key doesn't act like a lever if a lot of crap is attached to it.
#6
The key cut practically looks identical to the other key... so it sounds like nothing in the ignition was replaced either.
If you read the article I linked to, it explains the wide hole is being replaced with the narrow hole version, so the key doesn't act like a lever if a lot of crap is attached to it.
If you read the article I linked to, it explains the wide hole is being replaced with the narrow hole version, so the key doesn't act like a lever if a lot of crap is attached to it.
Thanks.
#7
I don't think the cylinder is the issue with a weak spring, as in the other recall cases.
I'm not sure if they can replace a cylinder by cutting a new one with a set of keys. Look inside it and see if it looks used or new?
I'm not with GM or anything, and only going by what I have seen and read.
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#9
Greetings,
Great forum you have here!
I have a 2002 Impala that was subject to the Ignition Switch Recall as issued by GM. I dropped the vehicle off. The Dealership had the vehicle for two months or so. I gave them one key.
I received a telephone call the other morning from the Service Manager of the Chevrolet Dealership who told me that the repair was made and to "...be sure to throw away your old keys". Made sense to me since the new switch would require a new key, correct?
By sheer accident this morning I put one of the OLD keys in and the vehicle started. I tried the second old key and it fired up as well.
So, I have two new keys that came with the new switch, and two old keys that I had prior to the replacement of the switch.
What are the odds of the old keys fitting this new switch?
Many thanks!
Great forum you have here!
I have a 2002 Impala that was subject to the Ignition Switch Recall as issued by GM. I dropped the vehicle off. The Dealership had the vehicle for two months or so. I gave them one key.
I received a telephone call the other morning from the Service Manager of the Chevrolet Dealership who told me that the repair was made and to "...be sure to throw away your old keys". Made sense to me since the new switch would require a new key, correct?
By sheer accident this morning I put one of the OLD keys in and the vehicle started. I tried the second old key and it fired up as well.
So, I have two new keys that came with the new switch, and two old keys that I had prior to the replacement of the switch.
What are the odds of the old keys fitting this new switch?
Many thanks!
GM recalled a 12 year old + vehicle for an ignition switch?
How embarrassing that you actually showed up at the dealership expecting them to replace a switch on a car with likely more than 120,000 miles.
I have been saying it all along, Americans are ****** who expect something for nothing on a regular basis.
How embarrassing that you actually showed up expecting GM to fix
a car that is over 12 years old!!!!!!!!!!
Sad state of affairs. Embarrassing at every level. "Give me something for nothing GOD DAMNIT!!!!" "I DESERVE SOMETHING FOR NOTHING LIKE ALL AMERICANS!!!!!!!"
PIECE OF **** on every possible level. Embarrasssing ****s asking for compensation!
Dont forget.................Sledge argued how 20" tires have the thinnest rims therefore the loudest tire noise. This is an example of stupidity. Americans are so stupid nowadays it is embarrassing beyond belief. Good luck to you "ignant" ******** with no clue. Strapping a 9mm will not make you cool or smart. That much has been proven. Any chance you fools see the mis spelled words? Doubt it!!!!
Last edited by Todd2869; September 30th, 2014 at 7:30 PM.
#10
They don't cut key cylinders. each lock cylinders tumblers are assembled to match the existing key code. That way you don't have to have 2 keys to open the door and start the car. the factory key code is retained and you can have keys cut by the dealer using the vin.