BlindFaith429
Member
- Joined
- December 9, 2014
- Messages
- 13
- Reaction score
- 0
- City, State
- Connecticut
- Year, Model & Trim Level
- 2009 Ford Escape Sport
Hello all!
First, let me introduce myself. My name is Nick, and I live in Connecticut. I am 25 years old, and currently drive a stock 2009 Ford Escape Sport. I also have a 1980 Ford Pinto that was my fathers, which I take to shows and out for rides when the weather is nice. My father is a mechanic, and I learned to wrench on cars at a very early age. Together, we have rebuilt his 1964 Falcon from the ground up, and my 1980 Pinto.
In April of 2015, my fiance's lease on her CRV is up. We are currently planning / saving for a wedding, so we decided to get a beater for me to drive to work to cut down on vehicle expenses. She will be driving my Escape and I will be driving the beater.
I recently found a white 1999 Explorer Sport locally, and purchased it. It has the 4.0 liter V6 and a 5-speed stick (I am no stranger to stick, my Pinto is a 5-speed). It has 157k on it. It runs and drives smooth and shifts perfect. No grinding or any other weird noises.
The interior needs a good cleaning, which I am capable of doing, and the shocks are shot. I have a set of Monroe Sensa-Trac shocks on the way. From what I have read online, they seem to be a good balance of firmness, price, and quality. The outside has a little rust on the bottom of the body, between the rear tire and the doors. I don't really care about it as it is cosmetic and I just need it to run strong for daily driving.
My question is this. What else should I look for / look at when going over the vehicle to make sure it is in good running shape? What areas do I need to look at more specifically that may be problem areas or have notoriously been bad on these SUV's?
I was thinking about doing plugs and wires just for good measure. The oil in it is clean, was changed about 1,000 miles ago according to the previous owners records.
My intent is to keep it pretty much stock and upgrade little bits as I need to. I am not going all out and adding roof-racks, brush guards, lift kits, big tires etc.
Oh, and before I had my Escape, I drove a 2000 Ranger for 5 years, so I am no stranger to the platform.
Thanks so much!
EDIT: Forgot to put that the Explorer is RWD
First, let me introduce myself. My name is Nick, and I live in Connecticut. I am 25 years old, and currently drive a stock 2009 Ford Escape Sport. I also have a 1980 Ford Pinto that was my fathers, which I take to shows and out for rides when the weather is nice. My father is a mechanic, and I learned to wrench on cars at a very early age. Together, we have rebuilt his 1964 Falcon from the ground up, and my 1980 Pinto.
In April of 2015, my fiance's lease on her CRV is up. We are currently planning / saving for a wedding, so we decided to get a beater for me to drive to work to cut down on vehicle expenses. She will be driving my Escape and I will be driving the beater.
I recently found a white 1999 Explorer Sport locally, and purchased it. It has the 4.0 liter V6 and a 5-speed stick (I am no stranger to stick, my Pinto is a 5-speed). It has 157k on it. It runs and drives smooth and shifts perfect. No grinding or any other weird noises.
The interior needs a good cleaning, which I am capable of doing, and the shocks are shot. I have a set of Monroe Sensa-Trac shocks on the way. From what I have read online, they seem to be a good balance of firmness, price, and quality. The outside has a little rust on the bottom of the body, between the rear tire and the doors. I don't really care about it as it is cosmetic and I just need it to run strong for daily driving.
My question is this. What else should I look for / look at when going over the vehicle to make sure it is in good running shape? What areas do I need to look at more specifically that may be problem areas or have notoriously been bad on these SUV's?
I was thinking about doing plugs and wires just for good measure. The oil in it is clean, was changed about 1,000 miles ago according to the previous owners records.
My intent is to keep it pretty much stock and upgrade little bits as I need to. I am not going all out and adding roof-racks, brush guards, lift kits, big tires etc.
Oh, and before I had my Escape, I drove a 2000 Ranger for 5 years, so I am no stranger to the platform.
Thanks so much!
EDIT: Forgot to put that the Explorer is RWD