flainn
Member
- Joined
- December 3, 2012
- Messages
- 23
- Reaction score
- 1
- City, State
- Los Lunas, NM
- Year, Model & Trim Level
- 1991 Ford Explorer XLT
I finally braved the cold outside to drive my Explorer up on ramps and take a good look at things on the transmission.
The lower electrical connection seemed (maybe) not all the way on, in spite of my earlier diagnosis, so I unplugged it and cleaned things up with some B-12 Chemtool cleaner and canned air.
When I put the plug back on, it didn't want to snap. Sure enough, when I had taken it off, it was not plugged in all the way (the snap connector hadn't "snapped").
I had to use a long flat screwdriver to gently get it to snap on.
And that fixed it. That's all the problem was -- that connector wasn't plugged in all the way. I went from having no 4th gear, no TC lockup, and no kickdown to having all three of those.
What an easy fix. I wish they were all like this.
I confirmed the KOEO codes (86 and 89) that I was getting are gone now, too. And my RPMs at 75 MPH are where they should be (2275 by my calculation, about 2350 on the RPM gauge).
The lower electrical connection seemed (maybe) not all the way on, in spite of my earlier diagnosis, so I unplugged it and cleaned things up with some B-12 Chemtool cleaner and canned air.
When I put the plug back on, it didn't want to snap. Sure enough, when I had taken it off, it was not plugged in all the way (the snap connector hadn't "snapped").
I had to use a long flat screwdriver to gently get it to snap on.
And that fixed it. That's all the problem was -- that connector wasn't plugged in all the way. I went from having no 4th gear, no TC lockup, and no kickdown to having all three of those.
What an easy fix. I wish they were all like this.
I confirmed the KOEO codes (86 and 89) that I was getting are gone now, too. And my RPMs at 75 MPH are where they should be (2275 by my calculation, about 2350 on the RPM gauge).