Check the hydraulic fluid resivor for the clutch its lacated on the drivers side, in the corner closest to the winshield should be a little white cylinder with a cap on it. Hop this helps.. Steve
Also, assuming it is a manual. Try putting the truck in gear with the truck off, hold in the clutch and start the engine. let off the clutch and see if it engages, meaning the vehicle will move under its own power. Now try to shift gears if it will not shift then your slave cylinder is probably bad. Good luck!
No.
I just experienced this SAME problem with my '88 and changed the Fuel Pump and Filter...and guess what, all fixed and running like a dream!
A 2001 Jeep Grand Cherokee 4.7L would have a 545rfe transmission.
no. 1986 to 1990 sorry
An AW4 transmission from a 1991 Jeep Cherokee will not fit into a 1988 Jeep Cherokee. The transmissions in the varying years do not appear to be compatible with one another.
I would assume it would. I haven't worked with those specific years but everything I've seen with the Cherokee(and jeep in general) is that most years are interchangeable as long as they are same engine size.
The transmission oil line from a 1991 model of a Jeep Cherokee will fit a 1988 model of a Jeep Cherokee because the transmission oil line fits all Cherokee models that were made between 1987 and 1996.
Yes you can
Driver side of firewall.
Have your fuel filter checked first. If that doesn't solve your problem, then have your catalytic convertor checked.
Mine Does
It was an option