kubrickan
New Member
- Joined
- August 11, 2025
- Messages
- 3
- Reaction score
- 1
- City, State
- Denver, CO
- Year, Model & Trim Level
- 93 Explorer XLT
Hello, long time lurker.
My grandfather has had a 93 Explorer XLT my whole life, he no longer wants it and I of course wanted to scoop it up. Cosmetically, it looks brand new. Immaculately cared for. 120k miles, kept up on maintenance religiously. To take possession I had to fly to california and drive it home to Colorado where I live. His mech who he trusts checked it out and declared it road worthy after him maybe driving it 1000 miles cumulatively over the last 5 years.
It was a 103 degree day in the CA central valley and the thing immediately started to run hot driving over the first incline I encountered. Made it maybe 60 miles. Stopped a couple times to have it cool off before deciding to turn around. Around the third cooling stop, the thing wouldn't kick into gear. Noticed the trans fluid (auto) was low, took 3 quarts and was able to kick it into drive. Thinking there is a serious problem now, only focused on limping it back the 60 miles. Runs fine for 45 mins, overheats again, I stop and let it cool for 20, begin to drive. Last 5 minutes before it overheats again, stop, and same deal, trans won't kick into gear. Add 3 quarts fluid again (all I had), and it kicks into reverse but not drive. Have to tow it the last 15 miles.
Interested in anyones experience what could be wrong, it's at the shop now. More importantly, how much money would you dump into a cosmetically beautiful Gen 1 explorer to save it? Only dailying my 91 BMW E30 and wanted something with more offroad capabilities. Reading these forums I was thinking of a 2 inch body lift and some bigger tires for improved ground clearance. Was looking forward to it as a project car. Have a number of maybe the KBB value in my mind as the limit, and of course, I'll need to fly back to California and attempt the 1200 mile drive to CO again in a few weeks if I decide to save it. What would you do? I'm in love with how it looks and feels but do I save myself heartbreak early here and cut bait?
My grandfather has had a 93 Explorer XLT my whole life, he no longer wants it and I of course wanted to scoop it up. Cosmetically, it looks brand new. Immaculately cared for. 120k miles, kept up on maintenance religiously. To take possession I had to fly to california and drive it home to Colorado where I live. His mech who he trusts checked it out and declared it road worthy after him maybe driving it 1000 miles cumulatively over the last 5 years.
It was a 103 degree day in the CA central valley and the thing immediately started to run hot driving over the first incline I encountered. Made it maybe 60 miles. Stopped a couple times to have it cool off before deciding to turn around. Around the third cooling stop, the thing wouldn't kick into gear. Noticed the trans fluid (auto) was low, took 3 quarts and was able to kick it into drive. Thinking there is a serious problem now, only focused on limping it back the 60 miles. Runs fine for 45 mins, overheats again, I stop and let it cool for 20, begin to drive. Last 5 minutes before it overheats again, stop, and same deal, trans won't kick into gear. Add 3 quarts fluid again (all I had), and it kicks into reverse but not drive. Have to tow it the last 15 miles.
Interested in anyones experience what could be wrong, it's at the shop now. More importantly, how much money would you dump into a cosmetically beautiful Gen 1 explorer to save it? Only dailying my 91 BMW E30 and wanted something with more offroad capabilities. Reading these forums I was thinking of a 2 inch body lift and some bigger tires for improved ground clearance. Was looking forward to it as a project car. Have a number of maybe the KBB value in my mind as the limit, and of course, I'll need to fly back to California and attempt the 1200 mile drive to CO again in a few weeks if I decide to save it. What would you do? I'm in love with how it looks and feels but do I save myself heartbreak early here and cut bait?