Facimeor
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- March 15, 2011
- Messages
- 140
- Reaction score
- 0
- Year, Model & Trim Level
- 1998 XLT
Looks amazing and looks like no shortcuts either. I would have all the confidence in the world in that truck if I bought it.
Funny you should put it that way, as I feel the same about it regardless of its miles. Here are some other things I fixed along the way:
- audio display intermittant - resoldered the power supply as per help from here. now working steady
- HVAC fan made noise then stopped altogether - solution was to remove the mouse nest in the squirrel fan and unshort the resistor
- bad power window chaild safety switch made only drivers controls work - fixed by taking switch apart and cleaning the contacts
- armrest cover shredded - replaced with black genuine leather
- fog light mounts broken, lights flopping around, one bulb out- fixed mount with epoxy, replaced both bulbs with silverstar upgrades
Also from this thread here is the meat of the trans repair:
Might as well make this a diary of the process since I went ahead and dove in head first like I always do.
So, it took me a little over 6 hours to get the trans out of the vehicle. Part of the problem was that everything was stuck fast and the exhaust was pretty rusty. Rather than making more work for myself down the road by having to pull manifolds and drill broken studs I took my time, used plenty of Blaster and worked all my exhaust bolts out without breaking anything. It was quite a relief actually.
After that it was fairly routine but still it seemed like everything took extra effort to free up for removal. It doesnt help I dont have a lift and Im working on cold concrete with a near 50yo body, but...she came out!
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That was yesterday, so today I cleaned up the outside of the trans. Easy off oven cleaner FTW! I then mounted it to an engine stand, an idea I got from the explorer forums and set to taking it apart:
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I dedicated a work area and table to the job so I could keep everything in order, clean and organized. I have pretty good light in this spot as well.
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So skip ahead to most of the day taking my time, being careful to note how everything came apart and which was was up...I came to the reason for this repair, the broken reverse band. Ive seen this exact same failure on others pictures. Seems like a weakpoint, but what do you expect at 300K miles.
The tab that the reverse servo pushes on to constrict the reverse band was broken off.
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At the end of the day, this is where I stood, transmission torn completely down, everything bagged and/or tagged and all I can do now is wait for my rebuild kit to arrive. (note the laptop for the teardown manual on hard drive for assistance as needed). Man I love technology.
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The guts of the beast. Everything looked really good coming out.
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The problem and the solution:
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and fast forward to a few hours later, completely reassembled:
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I also ended up replacing the transfer case as it turned out the one in there had been run dry of fluid and the chain was badly stretched. During the process of finding that problem I ended up buying a replacement front carrier as well. I say buy, but it was really more of a trade screw up on the junkyards part so I ended up with it for free. Total cost of the transfer case and front carrier ended up at around $175 with fluids.
All said and done I have just under $1000 into the truck including an estimated cost for the chemicals I used that I had on hand. Kelly Blue Book on it even with the miles is just over $4k, so I think it was worth the effort!
