jjm0001
Member
- Joined
- June 20, 2001
- Messages
- 23
- Reaction score
- 0
- City, State
- Wilmington, DE
- Year, Model & Trim Level
- 2000 Explorer Sport
I had a problem trying to start my 2000 explorer sport today after work. The car had been sitting for like 8 hours all day and it's like 50 deg outside. Turn the ignition key, acted like it was going to start for a second, but didn't. I tried again, cranked for like 5-10 seconds, the engine cranks, but it would not start and run. I tried a couple more times but no luck. So I waited about 10 minutes and the same problem, won't start. Opened the owner's manual (since I had nothing better to do) and it says if below 10 deg F, you can depress the gas pedal to start. I know it's not that cold, but I depressed the gas pedal to the floor and let go. Then I turned the key, and it started for a second, then died. So then I held the pedal to the floor, cranked it and it started right up, running a little rough. I held the pedal at about 2000 rpms, and when I let off of the pedal it acted like it would stall out, so I held the pedal for about a minute. Then after a minute, the engine idled fine. So it seems to me that the engine wasn't getting gas to start. The car has 31,000 miles on it! I can't believe this thing wouldn't start right. I read some previous threads on hard starting, but I don't know if I have the same problem. Does the computer on this model record the source of this type of problem, even if the check engine light doesn't light up? Can a Ford dealer read problems like this off the computer memory? Any ideas or experience with this problem would be appreciated.