I think Mr yes is wrong, I believe they are on the bottom of the radiator and there is an access hole on the underside of the radiator support.
The radiator sits on two rubber blocks at the bottom of the radiator support and if you crawl under the front bumper cover and look up to the right side of the car at bottom of the support you should see a the hole.
I work on alot of different kinds of cars and its been a while since I worked on a cavalier so hard to recall all things from each model,but I do not ever remember GM getting rid of any of these drain plugs on any model car they have made.
For instance I have a 2006 impala in my shop now and it has one and so has every other model GM,ford,Chrysler I have worked on.
If you still have problems send me an email and I will get to bottom of this.
2006-12-27 11:04:14
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answer #1
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answered by vmaxer85 4
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ok you stated once you positioned the vehicle in tension it starts off to rev up. would not be a transmission situation. Is your examine engine easy on? if so as this is the place i could start up my prognosis by using having the codes examine. No you do not would desire to tension the vehicle for an hour in spite of the incontrovertible fact that it is going to likely be warmed as much as get a perfect analyzing. Trans fluid expands whilst this is heat. start up the vehicle up and whilst this is warmed up at idle pull the stick and wipe it and then reinsert pull it out and examine your analyzing. If it shows finished or interior the risk-free section depart it on my own. "healthful" transmission fluids looks reddish in colour and has a different smell. If this is brown or very dark in colour you're turning out to be a situation or the transmission purely desires servicing. Your motor vehicle has a provider era for the transmission in spite of the incontrovertible fact that maximum folk overlook it until they adventure a situation.
2016-12-11 17:13:18
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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I agrre with Mr. Yes, it does not exist. I have 2 cavaliers 96 and 90 and neither one of them has a drain plug. You have to take off the bottom hose to drain.
2006-12-29 12:41:52
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Sorry, it does not exist. GM removed them as a cost savings decision. You must remove the lower radiator hose to drain the system.
2006-12-27 10:54:03
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answer #4
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answered by yes_its_me 7
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you might want to look on the bottom side of the radiator. I don't think you need a map.
2006-12-27 14:40:40
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answer #5
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answered by captndck 1
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bottom left of rad on front side
2006-12-27 15:11:30
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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My hubby agrees with vmax. He's also a mechanic.
2006-12-27 11:25:14
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answer #7
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answered by nursesr4evr 7
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No idea
2006-12-30 00:52:43
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answer #8
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answered by mjk 2
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