There is a black strip to the left of the throttle body that has three bolts,remove these bolts and pull the strip away and you will see the spark plugs, change them out and line the boots up with the top of the plugs and replace the strip
Beneath their coils.
I own a 2006 3.7L grand Cherokee and my tune up consists of spark pug replacements (6) for me, differential fluid change, ATF fluid change (no flush), and PCV. If you have a transfer case you will need to change that as well. good luck!
They are under the coils.They are under the coils.
No. Each has its own drain plugs. The auto tran. Is filled at the pipe where the dip stick is. Check manual for fluid types or go to a parts house or the jeep dealer. Either one will help you.
Depends on what year the Jeep was made. Most Jeeps use a fuel rail that receives fuel from the fuel tank, and under pressure, feeds fuel injector plugs located inside the manifold housing. Novice car repair people think the fuel injectors are the spark plugs (spark plugs have flexible wires leading from the distributer cap to the tops of the spark plugs.) Hope this helps.
it is a diagram of the engine?
No.
in the manual it says to use Mopar Automatic Transmission Fluid or equivalent labeled Dexron II or Mercon Quadra-trac 1.2L Select-trac 1.3L Command-trac 1.0L train and fill plugs recommended tightening torque is 30 to 40 foot-pounds i got all of this out of my 1993 Grand Cherokee owner's manual
The 1993 Jeep grand Cherokee brake light switch simply plugs in and out. The brake light switch is located beneath the dashboard on the drivers side of the engine compartment.
Dirty spark plugs can occur on any make, model, or year. Changing the spark plugs should be done for maintenance, such as when you do a tune up.
The firing order is 1-5-3-6-2-4.
V8, 1-8-4-3-6-5-7-2 I6, 1-5-3-6-2-4
bad plugs
Beneath their coils.
I own a 2006 3.7L grand Cherokee and my tune up consists of spark pug replacements (6) for me, differential fluid change, ATF fluid change (no flush), and PCV. If you have a transfer case you will need to change that as well. good luck!
Generally I change platinum plugs at 100K and regular plugs at 50K.
The plugs are under the coil packs that are on the passanger side of the vehicle. This is of course if you have the 4.0 engine. I would need to know more about your vehicle to gie you the best answer.