Seats and Restraint Systems
....................... 7
Front Seats
.............................................. 9
Rear Seats
............................................. 20
Safety Belts
............................................ 21
Child Restraints
...................................... 42
Airbag System
........................................ 68
Restraint System Check
......................... 82
Features and Controls
................................ 85
Keys
....................................................... 86
Doors and Locks
.................................... 91
Windows
................................................ 93
Starting and Operating Your Vehicle
....... 95
Mirrors
.................................................. 133
Storage Areas
...................................... 135Instrument Panel
....................................... 137
Instrument Panel Overview
................... 140
Climate Controls
................................... 157
Warning Lights, Gages, and
Indicators
.......................................... 161
Audio System(s)
................................... 184
Driving Your Vehicle
................................. 205
Your Driving, the Road, and
Your Vehicle
..................................... 206
Towing
................................................. 241
Service and Appearance Care
.................. 245
Service
................................................. 248
Fuel
...................................................... 251
Checking Things Under the Hood
......... 266
Rear Axle
............................................. 311
2007 Chevrolet Kodiak Owner ManualM
1
Keys.............................................................. 86
Remote Keyless Entry (RKE) System.......... 87
Remote Keyless Entry (RKE)
System Operation.................................... 88
Doors and Locks.......................................... 91
Door Locks................................................. 91
Power Door Locks....................................... 92
Windows....................................................... 93
Manual Windows......................................... 93
Power Windows.......................................... 94
Sliding Rear Window................................... 94
Sun Visors.................................................. 95
Starting and Operating Your Vehicle........... 95
New Vehicle Break-In.................................. 95
Ignition Positions......................................... 96
Engine Starter Over-Crank Protection.......... 97
Starting the Gasoline Engine....................... 97
Starting the Diesel Engine......................... 100
Engine Alarm and Automatic Shutdown..... 104
High Idle System....................................... 106
Exhaust Restrictor (Engine Warm-Up)........ 108
Engine Checks Before Operating............... 109
Engine Coolant Heater.............................. 111
Diesel Engine Exhaust Brake.................... 112Two-Speed Rear Axle Electric
Shift Control........................................... 113
Air Shift Control (Automatic
Transmission)......................................... 114
Automatic Transmission Operation............. 115
Manual Transmission Operation................. 116
Power Take-Off (PTO)............................... 118
Four-Wheel Drive...................................... 119
Parking...................................................... 125
Parking Brake (With Hydraulic Brakes)...... 125
Parking Brake (with Air Brakes)................. 126
Parking Brake Burnish Procedure.............. 128
Air Suspension.......................................... 129
Parking Over Things That Burn................. 130
Engine Exhaust......................................... 131
Running the Engine While Parked............. 132
Mirrors......................................................... 133
Manual Rearview Mirror............................. 133
Outside Manual Mirrors............................. 133
Outside Power Mirrors............................... 133
Outside Convex Mirrors............................. 134
Outside Heated Mirrors............................. 134
Storage Areas............................................. 135
Center Console Storage Area.................... 135
Section 2 Features and Controls
85
Mirrors
Manual Rearview Mirror
If your vehicle has this feature, pull the tab under
the mirror toward you to reduce glare from
headlamps behind you after dark. Push the tab
away from you to restore the mirror to the daytime
position.
Outside Manual Mirrors
Adjust the outside rearview mirrors so you can
see a little of the side of your vehicle, and the area
beside your vehicle from a comfortable driving
position. All mirrors can be folded in to enter
narrow passageways.
Outside Power Mirrors
If you have outside power mirrors, they can be
adjusted from the inside of the vehicle.The control for this
feature is located on
the driver’s door.
Select the mirror you want to move by turning the
switch clockwise to adjust the passenger’s side
mirror, or counterclockwise to adjust the driver’s
side mirror. The center position is neutral.
Then, adjust the mirror by pressing the outer
arrows on the switch until the mirror is in
the desired position.
133
Outside Convex Mirrors
{CAUTION:
A convex mirror can make things (like
other vehicles) look farther away than
they really are. If you cut too sharply into
the right or left lane, you could hit a
vehicle. Check your regular outside
mirrors (or your inside mirror, if you have
one) before changing lanes.
Your vehicle may have convex mirrors on both the
driver’s side and the passenger’s side. They are
curved to allow more to be seen from the
driver’s seat. A convex mirror can make things
look farther away than they really are.
Outside Heated Mirrors
If your vehicle has this feature, your outside
rearview mirrors can be defrosted.
The switch for this
feature is located in
the instrument
panel switchbank.
Press the bottom of the switch to turn the outside
heated rearview mirrors on. The switch indicator
light will come on and stay on whenever the
outside heated rearview mirrors are activated.
134
This switchbank is located in the center of the
instrument panel.
e(Marker Lamp Defeat Switch):SeeMarker
Lamps on page 152.
j(Manual High Idle Switch):SeeHigh Idle
System on page 106.
i(Traction Control Switch):SeeTraction
Control System (TCS) on page 216.
f(Outside Heated Mirror Switch):SeeOutside
Heated Mirrors on page 134.
g(Power Take Off Switch):SeePower
Take-Off (PTO) on page 118.
h(Rear Air Suspension Dump Control
Switch):Air Suspension on page 129.
k(Rear Axle Shift Control Switch):SeeAir Shift
Control (Automatic Transmission) on page 114.
q(Exhaust Brake Switch):SeeDiesel Engine
Exhaust Brake on page 112.
l(Differential Lock Control Switch):See
Rear Axle Differential Lock Control on page 215.
c(Airbag On/Off Switch):SeeAirbag Off
Switch on page 76.
If your vehicle does not have some of the features
controlled by these switches, there will be a
blank switch marker in its place.
155
•When it looks like a chance to pass is coming
up, start to accelerate but stay in the right lane
and do not get too close. Time your move so
you will be increasing speed as the time comes
to move into the other lane. If the way is clear to
pass, you will have a running start that more
than makes up for the distance you would lose
by dropping back. And if something happens to
cause you to cancel your pass, you need only
slow down and drop back again and wait for
another opportunity.
•If other cars are lined up to pass a slow vehicle,
wait your turn. But take care that someone is
not trying to pass you as you pull out to pass
the slow vehicle.
•Check your vehicle’s mirrors and start the left
lane change signal before moving out of the
right lane to pass. When you are far enough
ahead of the passed vehicle to see its front in
your vehicle’s passenger side outside mirror,
activate the right lane change signal and move
back into the right lane. Remember that, if your
vehicle’s right outside mirror is convex, the
vehicle you just passed may seem to be further
away from you than it really is.
•Try not to pass more than one vehicle at a time
on two-lane roads. Reconsider before passing
the next vehicle.
•Do not overtake a slowly moving vehicle too
rapidly. Even though the brake lamps are not
flashing, it may be slowing down or starting
to turn.
•If you are being passed, make it easy for the
following driver to get ahead of you. Perhaps
you can ease a little to the right.
Loss of Control
Let us review what driving experts say about what
happens when the three control systems — brakes,
steering, and acceleration — do not have enough
friction where the tires meet the road to do what the
driver has asked.
In any emergency, do not give up. Keep trying to
steer and constantly seek an escape route or
area of less danger.
221
Skidding
In a skid, a driver can lose control of the vehicle.
Defensive drivers avoid most skids by taking
reasonable care suited to existing conditions,
and by not overdriving those conditions.
But skids are always possible.
The three types of skids correspond to your
vehicle’s three control systems. In the braking skid,
your wheels are not rolling. In the steering or
cornering skid, too much speed or steering in a
curve causes tires to slip and lose cornering force.
And in the acceleration skid, too much throttle
causes the driving wheels to spin.
A cornering skid is best handled by easing your
foot off the accelerator pedal.
If you have the Traction Control System (TCS),
remember: It helps avoid only the acceleration
skid. SeeTraction Control System (TCS) on
page 216. If you do not have this system, or if
the system is off, then an acceleration skid is
also best handled by easing your foot off
the accelerator pedal.Of course, traction is reduced when water, snow,
ice, gravel, or other material is on the road.
For safety, you will want to slow down and adjust
your driving to these conditions. It is important
to slow down on slippery surfaces because
stopping distance will be longer and vehicle control
more limited.
While driving on a surface with reduced traction, try
your best to avoid sudden steering, acceleration,
or braking, including reducing vehicle speed by
shifting to a lower gear. Any sudden changes could
cause the tires to slide. You may not realize the
surface is slippery until your vehicle is skidding.
Learn to recognize warning clues — such as
enough water, ice, or packed snow on the road to
make a mirrored surface — and slow down when
you have any doubt.
If you have the Anti-Lock Brake System (ABS),
remember: It helps avoid only the braking skid.
If you do not have ABS, then in a braking
skid, where the wheels are no longer rolling,
release enough pressure on the brakes to get
the wheels rolling again. This restores steering
control. Push the brake pedal down steadily
when you have to stop suddenly. As long as the
wheels are rolling, you will have steering control.
222
Driving at Night
Night driving is more dangerous than day driving.
One reason is that some drivers are likely to
be impaired — by alcohol or drugs, with night
vision problems, or by fatigue.
Here are some tips on night driving.
•Drive defensively.
•Do not drink and drive.
•Adjust the inside rearview mirror to reduce the
glare from headlamps behind you.
•Since you cannot see as well, you may need
to slow down and keep more space between
you and other vehicles.
•Slow down, especially on higher speed roads.
Your vehicle’s headlamps can light up only so
much road ahead.
•In remote areas, watch for animals.
•If you are tired, pull off the road in a safe
place and rest.No one can see as well at night as in the daytime.
But as we get older these differences increase.
A 50-year-old driver may require at least twice as
much light to see the same thing at night as a
20-year-old.
What you do in the daytime can also affect your
night vision. For example, if you spend the
day in bright sunshine you are wise to wear
sunglasses. Your eyes will have less trouble
adjusting to night. But if you are driving, do not
wear sunglasses at night. They may cut down
on glare from headlamps, but they also make a
lot of things invisible.
You can be temporarily blinded by approaching
headlamps. It can take a second or two, or
even several seconds, for your eyes to re-adjust
to the dark. When you are faced with severe glare,
as from a driver who does not lower the high
beams, or a vehicle with misaimed headlamps,
slow down a little. Avoid staring directly into
the approaching headlamps.
223