fireman1374
New Member
- Joined
- December 9, 2010
- Messages
- 3
- Reaction score
- 0
Hi All,
I have a 1997 5.0 AWD Explorer. 64,200 original miles.
I bought this quite cheap because it had a problem. the transmission was bad. I replaced the transmission and took it for a spin, I noted that the front differential whined and became quite hot. I did figure out that the last genius (loosely) that owned the vehicle fitted differnent sized tires on the front, compared to the rear, okay, makes sense. I found a salvaged front differential and replaced it, but only after I had all the seals and bearing replaced and all gearing clearances confirmed. In the process, I replace both upper and lower ball joints on both sides and both CV axles on the front. Then I replaced all 4 tires with new ones. I then proceeded to test drive it, this test drive was extremely short. The noise was no longer present in the front differential, however the front seemed to bind. I accelerated the vehicle to 30 miles per hour and once I released the accelerator the vehicle lowered itself to 15 miles per hour in the same fashion that depressing the the brakes accomplish. I did remove the front drive shaft to inspect it and there is no appreciable play in it. The vehicle does run and drive appropriately with the front drive shaft removed. I did confirm the ratios in the differentials match those of Ford specifications.
I'm thinking the transfer case may be faulty.
What are your thoughts?
I have a 1997 5.0 AWD Explorer. 64,200 original miles.
I bought this quite cheap because it had a problem. the transmission was bad. I replaced the transmission and took it for a spin, I noted that the front differential whined and became quite hot. I did figure out that the last genius (loosely) that owned the vehicle fitted differnent sized tires on the front, compared to the rear, okay, makes sense. I found a salvaged front differential and replaced it, but only after I had all the seals and bearing replaced and all gearing clearances confirmed. In the process, I replace both upper and lower ball joints on both sides and both CV axles on the front. Then I replaced all 4 tires with new ones. I then proceeded to test drive it, this test drive was extremely short. The noise was no longer present in the front differential, however the front seemed to bind. I accelerated the vehicle to 30 miles per hour and once I released the accelerator the vehicle lowered itself to 15 miles per hour in the same fashion that depressing the the brakes accomplish. I did remove the front drive shaft to inspect it and there is no appreciable play in it. The vehicle does run and drive appropriately with the front drive shaft removed. I did confirm the ratios in the differentials match those of Ford specifications.
I'm thinking the transfer case may be faulty.
What are your thoughts?