popshc
New Member
- Joined
- March 6, 2009
- Messages
- 8
- Reaction score
- 0
- City, State
- Yorktown, VA
- Year, Model & Trim Level
- 1988 Ranger XLT
I just replaced a cracked head on my daughter's 1988 2.9 XLT Ranger. Water had leaked into the oil and created that wonderful carmel chocolate milkshake. Since she only knows how to put gas in the tank, she kept driving. Once it broke down, I got the hysterical phone call!
Since the combustion chambers was full of milkshake, it was running awful before it quit. After replacing the head, maching the intake manifold, cleaning the inerds & all external componets, tune-up, replaced a couple of sensors the motor now runs better than ever.
On my maiden test drive the tranny wouldn't go into overdrive nor would the torque converter lock up. The fuild was was clean and didn't smell burnt. But, it was a little overfilled, so I removed all of the excess. After much research I felt that this was probably an electrical problem. Eurika! The plug to solenoids in the gearbox was dis-connected. No problem, pluged it inand then decided to adjust the linkage while I was under there. No good deed goes unpunished, the shift lever attached to the transmission was moving but all it was doing was rotating around the shaft. To repair this I turned the lever around and pressed it back on using the kick-down cable bolt.
Now my questions:
1. Could the previous, poorly runnig engine be preventing the tranny from shifting into O/D?
2. What holds the shift lever on the internal shift shaft? Can this be removed and re-installed multiple times? If not any ideas on where to find a replacement?
Thanks for any assistance,
Wayne
Yorktown, VA
Since the combustion chambers was full of milkshake, it was running awful before it quit. After replacing the head, maching the intake manifold, cleaning the inerds & all external componets, tune-up, replaced a couple of sensors the motor now runs better than ever.
On my maiden test drive the tranny wouldn't go into overdrive nor would the torque converter lock up. The fuild was was clean and didn't smell burnt. But, it was a little overfilled, so I removed all of the excess. After much research I felt that this was probably an electrical problem. Eurika! The plug to solenoids in the gearbox was dis-connected. No problem, pluged it inand then decided to adjust the linkage while I was under there. No good deed goes unpunished, the shift lever attached to the transmission was moving but all it was doing was rotating around the shaft. To repair this I turned the lever around and pressed it back on using the kick-down cable bolt.
Now my questions:
1. Could the previous, poorly runnig engine be preventing the tranny from shifting into O/D?
2. What holds the shift lever on the internal shift shaft? Can this be removed and re-installed multiple times? If not any ideas on where to find a replacement?
Thanks for any assistance,
Wayne
Yorktown, VA