No 1988 is OBD 1, the connecter is under the hood.
It could be the IAC module that sits next to the throttle body. It controls your idle and is non-adjustable.Try cleaning toyr throttle body system first, if tht doesn't work it will need to be replaced. Good luck, Mike
Today's date is October 13, 2005 and this ad is on eBay today:
WINDOW MOTOR JEEP Cherokee, 84-86
starting price is 55.00 and buy it now is 80.00; at the time of purchase you let the seller know which window you need the motor for. I assume that means they have them in stock.
Becacuset there's something still drawing power. Hook an ampmeter to the battery, then pull the fuses one by one to see when the current drain stops. Then look at what's powered from that fuse to find the fault.
They both have the same job, the only thing difference is their application. The "shock" dampens continued vibrations from the springs while the "stabilizer" dampens the "shimmy" that the front tires cause.
None. The Comanche uses a spring under axle setup and blocking the axle would lower the vehicle. However, if you can use a torch and weld, you can cut your spring mounts, do some grinding and relocate them to the topside of the axle housing, and turn it into a spring over axle setup, giving you about 4.5in. of lift in the rear.
It takes about 14 hours to travel from BullHead City to Colorado Springs.
an nv 3550 transmission would be good.. an nv 4500 would even be better but you would have to buy an adapter
well you by a hitch appropriate to the tong of your trailer (standard is 1 and 7/8 inches). you then mount it on your rear bumper, it took me awhile to find a hitch that would fit in the whole on the bumper, but if you go to a mechanics he can drill it out and make anything fit.
First, what have you done maintenance wise? Replaced the Air filter lately? Replaced your PCV breather or PCV valve? Tune up done? Evap system in order? etc..... If you have maintained these things great !!! Then;
Most likely, your carburetor is running too rich.... So when starting cold, your enging is running too rich which will cause the sputtering until it warms up.... The 2.8 carburetor has no external adustments to correct this problem so a replacement carburetor or overhaul may be in order to correct this.
But if you have not changed your air filter in awhile, you could be starving your jeep of the air it needs to run properly which could also cause the sputtering....
In the extended cab, it is located behind the jump seat on the passenger's side.
The Comanche verb meaning to love is kamakʉrʉ. Its literal meaning is "wanting someone to remain nearby".
They didn't dominate the plains. The Lakota and Cherokee were more dominant in the plains along with the Blackfoot.
Loosen all visable bolts on power-steering pump (4.0 Liter only). Take a 12mm socket with approx. 4-6" ext. (3/8 drive will do nicely....) and reach UNDER the right-hand side of the pump, and you should find a tensioning bolt. Relax tension until belt comes off. You may need a small pry-bar to push unit inward once tension is released. Install is opposite of de-install. *NOTE: If you get the old belt off and forget how to put the new one back on, just remember, no matter what make,model, vehicle, the OUTSIDE of the belt runs on slick pullies, and the INSIDE of the belt runs on the pullies with raised grooves.............If you don't have PWR STR you'll probably have an idler bracket & bearing (rider's-side) with adjmt.......Hope this helps.
On my 87 Comanche, Interior of the Cab drivers side fuse box long silver circuit breaker at the bottom of the fuse box. By long I mean rectangular as opposed to round. It is a circuit breaker not a fuse that controls the Wipers.
take out the plug and fill it till it comes back out the fill hole
I figured it out. The drain plug does not take a standard size that we have here in the U.S. My 3/8 ratchet was just a little to large to fit into the plug opening. I took a 3/8 bolt and squared it off using my bench grinder (basically ground the threads off of the bolt). I only took a little off each side and on my third attempt the bolt fit the opening. Then, I put a 9/16 socket on the bolt head and was able to loosen the drain plug. The bolt also works to loosen the fill plug. The transmission is in a 1987 Jeep Comanche. It's my sons truck and he got it stuck underwater in a creek bed and water got into the transmission and the engine oil pan. We got almost 8 gallons of water out of the cab with the shop vac after he drained at least that much water from the cab when I pulled him out of the creek. (I think he enjoyed it anyway.)