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5 answers

Best thing to keep them from sticking is to buy some silicone spray or grease (hardware stores or parts stores carry it) and wipe down the weatherstrips with it...do not spray it on directly...spray it on a towel or rag and wipe it on the weatherstrips. It will keep them from sticking to the metal of the door. Have done it many times here in Wisconsin winters.

2007-11-23 02:01:28 · answer #1 · answered by paul h 7 · 1 0

My 1997 and 1990 did that years ago I would make sure before I parked my car for the night that the inside of the car was cool by shutting off the heat and opening a window for a bit without the heat inside it won't cause condensation to form and freeze hope this helps.

2007-11-23 01:24:41 · answer #2 · answered by Crystal B 4 · 0 0

ALL CAR DOORS DO NOT FREEZE!!
But the ones that have no drip edge around the top of the doors are highly likely to do that. What i do is spray WD-40 around the doors when cold weather sets in. And then every other week i use Vaseline it aids in making the doors open
easy.

2007-11-23 01:34:43 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 1

I have a 2001 that does the same , I tried spraying WD-40 and silicone lube but they still froze up. Someone told me to apply paste wax to the metal surface and the rubber wouldn't freeze to the metal. I did that am now I'm waiting for a cold day to see if it worked....

2007-11-23 01:21:31 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

all car doors do that

2007-11-23 01:17:01 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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