DarinM
Explorer
My inlaws just gave us a 1997 Grand Cherokee Laredo with Selec-Trac and the I-6. 151,xxx miles overall in really good shape.
It's been well maintained. They told us of a couple electrical issues - some kind of onboard computer thing that is dead and it also occasionally dies temporarily but will start again after a bit. I've been researching this and I think it's probably a crankshaft sensor or something that should be easy enough to fix.
We got the Jeep yesterday and drove it around a bit. Seemed OK - but I don't think the transfer case is disengaging. It seems as though it's always in 4 wheel drive no matter where I put the lever - more research to be done on this as I have time.
I drove it to work this morning and now I'm learning about my ignorance. I have about a 50 mile commute to work. When I pulled off the highway onto surface streets, I noticed quite alot of smoke coming from under my new/old vehicle. Crap!
I pulled into a nearby parking lot and looked under it to see oil on the rear of the vehicle, burning off the exhaust and some drips. Because I'm 50 miles from home and had about 2 miles to go to work, I decided to go ahead and see if I could get it to work. If there is something catastrophic, I can leave it parked there for awhile. Oil pressure seemed fine, no knocking, transmission wasn't slipping. At the time I was wondering if it was coming from the transfer case.
I got to work and as I was pulling into park it was grinding and definitely beginning to bind up. My closer inspection at this time found the rear diff plug was gone. I didn't know while inspecting that this is a piece of rubber(?!?!), so I'm trying to figure out how this thing got unscrewed and fell out! It was still very, very hot so I didn't mess with it anymore.
I grabbed some gloves a bit ago (work in a medical type place) and went out and stuck my finger in the diff. It still has some fluid remaining, so I'm really hoping the diff is going to be able to recover after I get some fluid added. It was definitely hot, but still turning when I parked it. Of course there are no replacement plugs in Hutchinson, KS so I'm having to pay same day freight to get one from a Jeep dealer in Wichita sent over to the dealer here.
I'll also check the front diff before driving home as well.
I know this Jeep hasn't been driven hardly at all in quite some time. Is it possible that plug just got hard and shrank some and when things heated up from me driving it farther than it's been driven in a very long time it just popped out? Who thought a rubber plug was a good idea? Is this something I need to worry about? Do people tap these things and put in a screw-in plug?
Thank you, happy Monday. This is not an April Fool thingy.
It's been well maintained. They told us of a couple electrical issues - some kind of onboard computer thing that is dead and it also occasionally dies temporarily but will start again after a bit. I've been researching this and I think it's probably a crankshaft sensor or something that should be easy enough to fix.
We got the Jeep yesterday and drove it around a bit. Seemed OK - but I don't think the transfer case is disengaging. It seems as though it's always in 4 wheel drive no matter where I put the lever - more research to be done on this as I have time.
I drove it to work this morning and now I'm learning about my ignorance. I have about a 50 mile commute to work. When I pulled off the highway onto surface streets, I noticed quite alot of smoke coming from under my new/old vehicle. Crap!
I pulled into a nearby parking lot and looked under it to see oil on the rear of the vehicle, burning off the exhaust and some drips. Because I'm 50 miles from home and had about 2 miles to go to work, I decided to go ahead and see if I could get it to work. If there is something catastrophic, I can leave it parked there for awhile. Oil pressure seemed fine, no knocking, transmission wasn't slipping. At the time I was wondering if it was coming from the transfer case.
I got to work and as I was pulling into park it was grinding and definitely beginning to bind up. My closer inspection at this time found the rear diff plug was gone. I didn't know while inspecting that this is a piece of rubber(?!?!), so I'm trying to figure out how this thing got unscrewed and fell out! It was still very, very hot so I didn't mess with it anymore.
I grabbed some gloves a bit ago (work in a medical type place) and went out and stuck my finger in the diff. It still has some fluid remaining, so I'm really hoping the diff is going to be able to recover after I get some fluid added. It was definitely hot, but still turning when I parked it. Of course there are no replacement plugs in Hutchinson, KS so I'm having to pay same day freight to get one from a Jeep dealer in Wichita sent over to the dealer here.
I'll also check the front diff before driving home as well.
I know this Jeep hasn't been driven hardly at all in quite some time. Is it possible that plug just got hard and shrank some and when things heated up from me driving it farther than it's been driven in a very long time it just popped out? Who thought a rubber plug was a good idea? Is this something I need to worry about? Do people tap these things and put in a screw-in plug?
Thank you, happy Monday. This is not an April Fool thingy.