starskee
New Member
- Joined
- March 8, 2010
- Messages
- 4
- Reaction score
- 0
- City, State
- Midlands, UK
- Year, Model & Trim Level
- UK 1997 4.0 Explorer RHD
Hi Everyone!
Okay, I'll try and keep this brief. I have a UK spec 1997 Ford Explorer 4.0. I love it. It takes me, the wife, the kids and all our stuff to the beach and mountains of North Wales and pulls the boat or the caravan. Its great.
And it starts and runs great. Or it did do. Here's what happened.
On Sunday 1st August I lost the Bosch immobiliser key fob. I called the breakdown service and asked to be recovered to the Ford Dealer where a new fob could be ordered and programmed.
The breakdown service (RAC) sent a guy out who said he would try to start the car. I explained that from what I understood the immobiliser both cut the feed to crank the engine and the fuel supply as well. I showed him the immobiliser unit in the rear wing/fender and then I left him to it while I went to look again for the keyfob in the area I think I lost it.
When I came back he had a wire bridging the fuel relay, had removed number 2 relay to stop the vehicle horn sounding / alarm going off, (had at some point unplugged the wire block from the immobiliser to stop the hazard warning flashers blinking - though that could have been earlier on) and was operating the starter from under the bonnet/hood with a direct live feed. It was making a screeching sound that I had never heard before. When I asked him what that was he said it sounds like your battery is going flat because the starter isn't turning the flywheel.
The vehicle was recovered to the Ford dealer who recoded the key but pointed out that my starter motor was damaged and the vehicle would not start. They had made sure the battery was fully charged. Sure enough, when turning the key, there was this horrible screech again. The technician manually moved the flywheel round a little bit and got the car started.
My question is this, with the immobiliser engaged as it was, is there any way that the RAC mechanic could have caused damage to the starter or ring gear by trying to crank the engine from under the bonnet/hood with a direct feed to the start motor (the keys were in the ignition but he was alone so was doing it from under the bonnet/hood)? It seems a big coincidence to me that my Explorer was starting fine until this was tried.
Any help or advice gratefully received.
Jo
Okay, I'll try and keep this brief. I have a UK spec 1997 Ford Explorer 4.0. I love it. It takes me, the wife, the kids and all our stuff to the beach and mountains of North Wales and pulls the boat or the caravan. Its great.
And it starts and runs great. Or it did do. Here's what happened.
On Sunday 1st August I lost the Bosch immobiliser key fob. I called the breakdown service and asked to be recovered to the Ford Dealer where a new fob could be ordered and programmed.
The breakdown service (RAC) sent a guy out who said he would try to start the car. I explained that from what I understood the immobiliser both cut the feed to crank the engine and the fuel supply as well. I showed him the immobiliser unit in the rear wing/fender and then I left him to it while I went to look again for the keyfob in the area I think I lost it.
When I came back he had a wire bridging the fuel relay, had removed number 2 relay to stop the vehicle horn sounding / alarm going off, (had at some point unplugged the wire block from the immobiliser to stop the hazard warning flashers blinking - though that could have been earlier on) and was operating the starter from under the bonnet/hood with a direct live feed. It was making a screeching sound that I had never heard before. When I asked him what that was he said it sounds like your battery is going flat because the starter isn't turning the flywheel.
The vehicle was recovered to the Ford dealer who recoded the key but pointed out that my starter motor was damaged and the vehicle would not start. They had made sure the battery was fully charged. Sure enough, when turning the key, there was this horrible screech again. The technician manually moved the flywheel round a little bit and got the car started.
My question is this, with the immobiliser engaged as it was, is there any way that the RAC mechanic could have caused damage to the starter or ring gear by trying to crank the engine from under the bonnet/hood with a direct feed to the start motor (the keys were in the ignition but he was alone so was doing it from under the bonnet/hood)? It seems a big coincidence to me that my Explorer was starting fine until this was tried.
Any help or advice gratefully received.
Jo