5. There's a slot in the lock cylinder receptacle. Use a small screwdriver to depress the brass retainer that's engaged in the slot.
6. While depressing the retainer pull the lock cylinder out of the receptacle in the steering column.
Finally had the time to replace my ignition lock cylinder. Having to pop the hood to pull the cable out of the top of the coil to shut it off had already become very old...
It's an '86, so it is slightly different regarding 5 & 6 above.
There is no retainer that needs pressing to remove the lock cylinder.
- Retention of the cylinder is by a bolt that takes a torx screwdriver. The bolt has a threaded portion and an extended smooth shaft that goes through a gap in the guide along the bottom of the cylinder to retain the cylinder.
- Dis-assembly was fine: removed the key-alert switch, then removed the retention bolt, and cylinder slides right out.
Reassembly was awkward. With the new cylinder installed and retained by the bolt, the key-alert switch wouldn't fit in. With the switch already in, the cylinder wouldn't insert. (regardless of key position)
- Solution was to juggle between inserting the switch and cylinder, until both are fully in. Then then sneak the retention bolt past the tab on the switch. This got the bolt started, but the tab on the switch prevented the bolt from being tightened.
- I used a thin screwdriver blade to keep the tab and bolt head separated, while tightening the bolt with a torx screwdriver (this was done carefully, as it was really bending the plastic switch's tab), until the bolt head was past that tab.
- Then the torx screwdriver could fit past the tab to tighten the retaining bolt.
I broke the plastic shaft for the horn pinI was near done, checking the alignment of the steering wheel, when I slipped with the wheel and broke the plastic shaft for the horn pin. Shaft broke off of the plate, and at the top end of the shaft, around 1/3 of it broke off where it retains the bushing that retains the pin & spring.
Since I don't have a replacement, after some disassembly, I removed the brass ring from the plastic plate (bend brass tabs), then de-greased the plastic parts with acetone. Crazy Glue reluctantly held the plastic shaft back onto the plastic plate, then I added some more on the outside to ensure the crack was fully filled. Excess glue formed somewhat of a fillet between the shaft and the plate. Once fully dry (~an hour), that seemed to hold well. So I reassembled the brass ring to the plate, then inserted the spring, pin and retaining bushing into the shaft. Worked as original. Then I added a dab of crazy glue to the bushing-to-shaft to ensure it would stay there.
After drying, it seemed to work as intended. Reassembled, taking extra care in rotating that shaft-plate while aligning the steering wheel. Working perfectly - for now. I've no idea if Crazy Glue will hold that plastic repair for any length of time.
P.S.
Side effect - turn signal on this Eagle has always been a little stiff. While taking it apart, I couldn't see anything broken, worn or loose. Contact surfaces were well greased. When all was re-assembled, the turn signal still works correctly, but now is smooth to actuate and smooth to turn off.