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On the single lever handle just unscrew it.
Turn the water off to the faucet. Remove the handle. The top of the faucet should unscrew to get to the ball valve. Replace the valve and gaskets then reassemble the faucet.
Why is it that I can only find questions on this website and not a single answer at all? Useless.
Remove the speaker grill. There is a single screw. Take that off and the panel can be removed. remove the handle screws cover and remove the screws. Remove the opening door handle screws. there are two of those. You will be able to see then if you look behind the handle on the black cover.
If the faucet is the quarter turn or single handle type, you put new seal in it. There is some variance in how they come apart but here's the basics. Shut the water off. Remove the handle. Dual handle are held on with a screw through the top. Remove the hot/cold cap and the screw is under that. There will be a nut under that holding the stem in the faucet. Remove the nut and the stem will pull straight up and out. In the resulting hole you will see a small black seal, the size of a pencil erasure. This comes straight out. There is a small spring under the seal. Replacement seals usually come with a new spring. replace in reverse order and drip is fixed. The stem should only go in one way, usually a small tit that locates it. Single handle is basicly the same process. Handle is held on with a set screw, there may be a cover plate over it if it is on the front of the handle. Remove handle, bigger nut under it, larger ball under that and two of the rubber seals. Same process in replacing.
To replace the washer in a Delta faucet, begin by turning off the water supply. Next, remove the handle and unscrew the bonnet nut. Once the bonnet nut is removed, you can access the old washer and replace it with a new one before reassembling the faucet.
Per Haynes Repair Manual #36071, 1993-2005 Ford Ranger Pick-ups: On 1998 and later models, the interior door handle is secured by a single rivet that must be drilled out for handle removal. A rivet gun is necesssary to replace the drilled out rivet and to secure the handle in its original position. It is necessary to remove the door trim panel and watersheild for access.
No conversion, it would need to be replaced with a single handle faucet.
On my 94 escort wagon I had the same problem. The door handle is connected to a metal rod by a plastic clip. These clips get dry rotted over time and break. To fix this problem you can replace the clip or rig it as I did. To replace the clip: Simply unscrew the door handle. It is only attached by a single screw, readily visible. Remove old plastic clip from both rod and door handle and replace with the new plastic clip. It's fairly straight-forward. To rig it up: Get a fairly tough piece of wire. One that won't break easily but it still flexible. Unscrew the handle and remove the assembly from the door. Grab the rod that the handle pulls to make the door open. Insert the end of the rod through the hole in the back of the door handle. Wrap wire so that it holds the rod firmly in place. Then screw the handle assymbly back into the door. :) Easy enough.
Common failure on these cars. By the handle is a small round cap. Pop that off. Remove the T15 screw. Going along the border of the door, there's a T15 screw near the window (same height as the door handle) and another on the bottom. In the hand-pull, possibly under a little piece of vinyl, is a 7mm bolt. Then use a trim puller along the edges to remove the clips holding the door panel on. The top couple, you'll need to just pull it off. It's easy to break the tabs though. Once the door panel is off, it's a single 10mm bolt to remove the handle.
A single handle uses the same 3 holes as the double handle
As with any answer...it depends, but try this: If the faucet is the single handle type, use an Allen wrench to remove the small set screw from the handle, (if the handle set screw has too much mineral build up, wrap the handle to include the set screw with a paper towel. Secure it with a rubber band; and then soak with vinegar and leave it for several hours) "Break" the seal of the set screw using the Allen wrench, and remove the handle.The remaining parts, under the handle, will probably have the same problem. Use the same process. At this point turn off the valves leading to the fixture (you may have to turn off the water at the meter) Continue dismantling, use the correct and appropriately sized tools. This should help but if your faucets have been neglected for a long time, probably plan to replace the faucets.Hope this helps...