cmstache
New Member
- Joined
- January 6, 2016
- Messages
- 5
- Reaction score
- 0
- Year, Model & Trim Level
- '97 Explorer Sport
Having a bit of an issue, my explorer has been having issues starting recently. Changed the battery (it was time anyways) last weekend. The starter, while old, seems to be working fine.
Cold mornings, the starter just spins, sometimes I need to jump it with my fiance's car, sometimes it only takes a small booster (I live in an apartment complex, so we aren't always next to each other.) Often when it does crank up, it bogs down immediately, like it doesn't have gas. Sometimes giving it throttle helps, sometimes it doesn't. After a few tried (23-5 it starts fine and begins to idle. If the vehicle has been running I can restart it immediately fine. After about 3-4 minutes it takes a few tries. The vehicle itself runs fine, idles fine, and drives fine.
I think I've diagnosed the issue to the fuel pressure sensor, with the help of my more car-savy friends. The part itself is 100 bucks (I can probably get it for about $50 with connections) and as a poor 27-yr old, I don't like throwing parts at a vehicle. That being said, is there an easy way to test it? I was told to look inside for fuel, but the vaccum line facing the dash, so I can't see inside; doubt i could by the design even if it wasn't. If I unhooked it entirely, would I be able to see something somehow?
I'm not the most skilled guy with cars. I can do the basics (I've changed my EGR and IAC Valve, needed help for intake manifold gasket.), but I don't have the knowledge or ability (or space, even if i could) to tear apart an engine looking for issues.
It's a '97 Explorer Sport, 4.0 OHV V-6, manual trans., 275k miles. Pretty much stock engine. Any help would be great.
Cold mornings, the starter just spins, sometimes I need to jump it with my fiance's car, sometimes it only takes a small booster (I live in an apartment complex, so we aren't always next to each other.) Often when it does crank up, it bogs down immediately, like it doesn't have gas. Sometimes giving it throttle helps, sometimes it doesn't. After a few tried (23-5 it starts fine and begins to idle. If the vehicle has been running I can restart it immediately fine. After about 3-4 minutes it takes a few tries. The vehicle itself runs fine, idles fine, and drives fine.
I think I've diagnosed the issue to the fuel pressure sensor, with the help of my more car-savy friends. The part itself is 100 bucks (I can probably get it for about $50 with connections) and as a poor 27-yr old, I don't like throwing parts at a vehicle. That being said, is there an easy way to test it? I was told to look inside for fuel, but the vaccum line facing the dash, so I can't see inside; doubt i could by the design even if it wasn't. If I unhooked it entirely, would I be able to see something somehow?
I'm not the most skilled guy with cars. I can do the basics (I've changed my EGR and IAC Valve, needed help for intake manifold gasket.), but I don't have the knowledge or ability (or space, even if i could) to tear apart an engine looking for issues.
It's a '97 Explorer Sport, 4.0 OHV V-6, manual trans., 275k miles. Pretty much stock engine. Any help would be great.