4.0l Engine loss of power. Garage has no idea. - Ford Explorer and ...
www.explorerforum.com > ... > Elite Explorer 911!
May 17, 2010 - 19 posts - 11 authors
4.0l Engine loss of power. ... 1996 Explorer XLT Supercharged 347 w/ BW4406 Build Thread, 8000K ... 1999 Ford Explorer Sport [new playtoy]
Intermittent loss of power
11 posts
Feb 9, 2013
93 4.0 expo rough idle power loss ((PLEASE HELP))
19 posts
Nov 12, 2011
Sputter/Stutter and Loss of Power
19 posts
Jun 2, 2010
Loss of Power on Hills (NEED HELP!)
11 posts
Apr 9, 2009
More results from www.explorerforum.com
SOURCE: 2001 ford explorer sport trac 4 wheel drive wont work
Start the car
put in " N"
turn the 4X4 switch on
Then put in gear..
What do you see now?
Do the same in reverse when you take out of 4X4
SOURCE: '94 4.0L Ford Explorer losing power
Shouldn't cost much for 10 minutes work to test fuel pressure & confirm pump condition, but do it when vehicle 's been running for a while, long enough for pump to get heated up.
SOURCE: 96 Ford Explorer is studdering (misfiring) when going up hills
I have the same exact problem that just started immediately AFTER I got a tranny service where they changed the Trans Fluid, Trans Filter, Fuel Filter. Took it back and they say nothing is wrong with it. Took it to the dealer thinking I could get some REAL answers... they just told me to replace spark plugs, wiring & coil, for $900. Only studders when quickly accelerating above 40mph. I've check other forums, they say to clean the Mass Air Flow sensor. Haven't tried it yet. This seems the easiest before replacing spark plugs. Any other suggestions anyone?? Please.....
SOURCE: How do you replace the starter in a 1996 Ford
This is a very simple repair that is rendered near-impossible by the physical access a mortal human has to the starter work area. 1. Make sure you remove and secure the negative battery terminal connection before you start. As tight a squeeze as this repair is, you have zero chance of snaking a socket over one of the solenoid wire connections without bumping one of the other connections and shorting a circuit ONCE YOU DISCONNECT that battery, you're going to lose all your stored computer error codes. So, if you need to check those, check them before you start the repair. 2. You want to get your Explorer up on ramps. If the Explorer is dead, you aren't going to be able push that behemoth up ramps, so Plan B is to use T-pots or concrete blocks. Now... The long armed amongst you can try and do this repair from ABOVE, but -- at least where the starter's mounting bolts are concerned -- you'll probably want to do at least some of it from BELOW, with your face a good ways under the driver's side axle. You really, really, REALLY don't want to slide as far under the car as is necessary to complete this job with only a rickety jack keeping you from being squarshed like a grape. (Remember the scene in Goodfellas where they had that guy's head in a vice? Scorsese was forced by the MPAA ratings board to cut the part where Joe Pesci reaches over and spins the vice handle and the guy's head explodes all over the crew. That's your future if you're under the Explorer's axle and the jack slips. Don't be a fool.) 3. You definitely want a completely cool engine before you do this job. Not only will you have to snake your hand up through narrow, hot parts of the engine to disconnect the starter bolts from the engine (while underneath), but I swear you have to lay across the top of the engine to extract the old starter upwards and out and lower in the new one. (Maybe it will fit down through that little trapezoidal hole in the frame underneath, but I couldn't do it.) Which brings us to... HOLY ****, it's hard to get a socket on the two main mounting bolts of the starter (done from underneath), much less the disconnects for the various wires to the solenoid. (probably best done from above) I have really long orangutan arms and it was a uber-pain to stretch a socket downward on those solenoid nuts. Even if you had the car on a rack and were standing under it instead of creeping under, this would still be maddening. When you are under the car, there's an approx five inch trapazoidal hole in the frame where all the tools have to fit through for access to the mounting nuts and bolts. Brothah, if you don't have an automatic compressor-driven socket wrench (and compressor) borrow one from a friend who does. There is zero room to get torque on a standard socket wrench. Don't take this as gospel, but a 1/2 inch (13mm) did the lion's share of the work. There was a smaller nut on one of the solenoid connections. However, the lower of the two mounting nuts (the one with the wire attached by a second nut) will require EITHER A BOX END WRENCH ("Oh Jesus, kill me now") or a DEEP-WELL 1/2" SOCKET. Hope that saves you a trip back to the store. The main bolt has the mounting nut welded a third of the way down and is shaped kinda like: ===D====== OH! This is important, I guess: If you are doing the majority of disconnections from under the car, You want to disconnect the solenoid wires FIRST. If you pull out the starter mounting bolts, and then snake your socket onto the solenoid connection bolts, the whole assembly is just going to flop around when you try to apply torque, putting stress on the brittle wires. Again: "That's-a no good." I wish you luck. Job took me three hours, but fully 90 minutes of that were spent spewing profanity and saying "this can't be done!" I was wrong. It can be done. It's a "simple component swap repair" rendered challenging by my claustrophobia and some very optimistic design engineers at One Ford Plaza. Ramps/T-pots are your friend. Buy yourself as much room as you can under the car to work. Chock the back tires so the Explorer can't roll backwards off the T-pots or concrete blocks. An automatic compressor-driven socket ratchet is a bonus. SUPER TIP: Put the shop light on top of the front driver's side tire, shooting into the wheel well, It's the only good way we found to light the work area. The light I use didn't get hot enough to damage the tire, but beware that possibility.
549 views
Usually answered in minutes!
×