There are 3 or 4 plastic pins on the front and rear edge of the door panel. There is a plug in the middle of them. First push in the center plug slightly, only about an eighth of an inch or so and they will get loose. If you push too hard you will have to retrieve the center plugs from the inside bottom of the door. Use a small skinny screwdriver to push them in with. Very carefully put the screwdriver under the outside edge of the dart and gently pry it outward. Once you remove the darts there is a screw cover behind the door pull handle and the inside door latch. Again, carefully remove the cover with a small screwdriver, they mar very easily and those little covers are over $5 each. Remove the Philips-head screws under the covers. Next, there are 3 or 4 Philips-head screws along the bottom of the door panel that need to be removed. The door panel has a few "Christmas tree pins" that are still holding it in place so you will have to carefully pull out on the panel to locate them and then give the door panel a slight tug outward to release them. They are located throughout the center of the door panel. Once you have all the screws and pins loose, just pry along the bottom edge of the door panel and up the back edge and pull the panel away from the top of the door. The door panel will pull away from the door (it may sound like it’s going to break but it’s just the Christmas tree pins coming out of the door at the top). Then, all you have to do is reach down from the top and undo the wires and the door latch rod. (Note- The rod is held in by a friction clip that needs to be pushed to the side to release it. This is the hardest part because the edge that you need to push has a sharp parting line and is not comfortable on your fingers). Now you are done. Just reverse the procedure to put them back on. Total time- about 30 minutes.