Phil Shepherd
New Member
- Joined
- June 8, 2009
- Messages
- 4
- Reaction score
- 0
- City, State
- Atlanta, GA.
- Year, Model & Trim Level
- 1991 Ranger XLT Truck
Hey all, I am new to the site, but have been getting advice from this site on fixing my '91 Ranger's transmission for several weeks now. Special thanks to BrooklynBay -
I have seen several posts similar to the problems I am having, but I think I can narrow down the problem by what I have already accomplished.
First, the truck has 267k miles on it. Yep, over a quarter of a million, and the engine still runs like the day I bought it from my uncle with a scant 140k on it. No smoke, no oil burning, everything works. This 4 liter V-6 ranks up there as one of the best engine I have ever had in a vehicle.
The transmission is another story - an A4LD, with all the apparent problems. In the last several weeks it has started to hang up between 1st and 2nd gear, with the engine going to almost 4k RPM before shifting, unless I completely take my foot off the gas pedal and vacumn increases enough to pull it in gear, and then it will slowly slide into 2nd. 2nd to Drive is a bit slow too.
I can SHIFT MANUALLY into 2nd and it shifts right into gear. As a matter of fact, shifting gears manually allows the truck to shift into every gear with no apparent difficulties. Also, once into drive and overdrive (on the highway) it shifts just fine - going into overdrive, and downshifting to drive when I accelerate without manual shifting.
What I have worked on so far:
I replaced the fluid and filter.
I replaced the vacumn modulator. I know some of these are adjustable, but I did not find any adjustment on it. I was told by someone that the adjustment is inside of the barrel where one of the vacumn hoses connect. Is this true, and can the lack of adjustment be part of the problem? After these repairs, it is still not shifting properly, and as previously described.
In order to replace the modulator valve, I had to remove the seats and carpet inside the truck to get to the removable plate covering the modulator valve. I have pictures if anyone is interested. It is not something I'd want to do again if I can avoid it. Also, as the truck has got a lot of miles on it, and the value of the vehicle is basically the cost of a rebuild or less, I don't see a major transmission overhaul as something that makes sense financially on this truck.
Hope that's not too much for a first post!
Thanks -
Phil.
I have seen several posts similar to the problems I am having, but I think I can narrow down the problem by what I have already accomplished.
First, the truck has 267k miles on it. Yep, over a quarter of a million, and the engine still runs like the day I bought it from my uncle with a scant 140k on it. No smoke, no oil burning, everything works. This 4 liter V-6 ranks up there as one of the best engine I have ever had in a vehicle.
The transmission is another story - an A4LD, with all the apparent problems. In the last several weeks it has started to hang up between 1st and 2nd gear, with the engine going to almost 4k RPM before shifting, unless I completely take my foot off the gas pedal and vacumn increases enough to pull it in gear, and then it will slowly slide into 2nd. 2nd to Drive is a bit slow too.
I can SHIFT MANUALLY into 2nd and it shifts right into gear. As a matter of fact, shifting gears manually allows the truck to shift into every gear with no apparent difficulties. Also, once into drive and overdrive (on the highway) it shifts just fine - going into overdrive, and downshifting to drive when I accelerate without manual shifting.
What I have worked on so far:
I replaced the fluid and filter.
I replaced the vacumn modulator. I know some of these are adjustable, but I did not find any adjustment on it. I was told by someone that the adjustment is inside of the barrel where one of the vacumn hoses connect. Is this true, and can the lack of adjustment be part of the problem? After these repairs, it is still not shifting properly, and as previously described.
In order to replace the modulator valve, I had to remove the seats and carpet inside the truck to get to the removable plate covering the modulator valve. I have pictures if anyone is interested. It is not something I'd want to do again if I can avoid it. Also, as the truck has got a lot of miles on it, and the value of the vehicle is basically the cost of a rebuild or less, I don't see a major transmission overhaul as something that makes sense financially on this truck.
Hope that's not too much for a first post!
Thanks -
Phil.