2002 e150 how to change spark plugs?
you dont have to take off anything under the hood. Just remove the cowling inside the van ,between the seats. They just unbuckle, the bottom buckles rotate 360* to unfasten. you lay down & use extensions to reach the plugs. on passenger side, you can go from over the tire if it's easier for you. I sprayed WD40 on old plugs before I removed them. buy & put anti-sieze jell on threads of new plugs. Also I sprayed WD40 on new plugs after installing to make boot slide on easier.
Sounds like a fuel pump going bad or a plugged fuel filter. Have you had the pressure checked?
Sounds like a Vehicle Speed Sensor malfunction.
What if your 86 ford ecoline van won't start?
Diagnosis: Engine Won't Start or Run
WHEN AN ENGINE WON'T START
Every engine requires four basic ingredients to start: sufficient cranking speed, good compression, adequate ignition voltage (with correct timing) and fuel (a relatively rich air/fuel mixture initially). So any time an engine fails to start, you can assume it lacks one of these four essential ingredients. But which one?
To find you, you need to analyze the situation. If the engine won't crank, you are probably dealing with a starter or battery problem. Has the starter been acting up? (Unusual noises slow cranking, etc.). Is this the first time the engine has failed to crank or start, or has it happened before? Have the starter, battery or battery cables been replaced recently? Might be a defective part. Has the battery been running down? Might be a charging problem. Have there been any other electrical problems? The answers to these questions should shed some light on what might be causing the problem.
If an engine cranks but refuses to start, it lacks ignition, fuel or compression. Was it running fine but quit suddenly? The most likely causes here would be a failed fuel pump, ignition module or broken overhead cam timing belt. Has the engine been getting progressively harder to start? If yes, consider the engine's maintenance and repair history.
STARTING YOUR DIAGNOSIS
What happens when you attempt to start the engine? If nothing happens when you turn the key, check the battery to determine its state of charge. Many starters won't do a thing unless there is at least 10 volts available from the battery. A low battery does not necessarily mean the battery is the problem, though. The battery may have been run down by prolonged cranking while trying to start the engine. Or, the battery's low state of charge may be the result of a charging system problem. Either way, the battery needs to be recharged and tested.
If the battery is low, the next logical step might be to try starting the engine with another battery or a charger. If the engine cranks normally and roars to life, you can assume the problem was a dead battery, or a charging problem that allowed the battery to run down. If the battery accepts a charge and tests okay, checking the output of the charging system should help you identify any problems there.
A charging system that is working properly should produce a charging voltage of somewhere around 14 volts at idle with the lights and accessories off. When the engine is first started, the charging voltage should rise quickly to about two volts above base battery voltage, then taper off, leveling out at the specified voltage. The exact charging voltage will vary according to the battery's state of charge, the load on the electrical system, and temperature. The lower the temperature, the higher the charging voltage. The higher the temperature, the lower the charging voltage. The charging range for a typical alternator might be 13.9 to 14.4 volts at 80 degrees F, but increase to 14.9 to 15.8 volts at subzero temperatures.
If the charging system is not putting out the required voltage, is it the alternator or the regulator? Full fielding the alternator to bypass the regulator should tell you if it is working correctly. Or, take the alternator to a parts store and have it bench tested. If the charging voltage goes up when the regulator is bypassed, the problem is the regulator (or the engine computer in the case of computer-regulated systems). If there is no change in output voltage, the alternator is the culprit.
Many times one or more diodes in the alternator rectifier assembly will have failed, causing a drop in the unit's output. The alternator will still produce current, but not enough to keep the battery fully charged. This type of failure will show up on an oscilloscope as one or more missing humps in the alternator waveform. Most charging system analyzers can detect this type of problem.
ENGINE CRANKING PROBLEMS
If the engine won't crank or cranks slowly when you attempt to start or jump start the engine (and the battery is fully charged), you can focus your attention on the starter circuit. A quick way to diagnose cranking problems is to switch on the headlights and watch what happens when you attempt to start the engine. If the headlights go out, a poor battery cable connection may be strangling the flow of amps. All battery cable connections should be checked and cleaned along with the engine-to-chassis ground straps.
Measuring the voltage drop across connections is a good way to find excessive resistance. A voltmeter check of the cable connections should show no more than 0.1 volt drop at any point, and no more than 0.4 volts for the entire starter circuit. A higher voltage drop would indicate excessive resistance and a need for cleaning or tightening.
Slow cranking can also be caused by undersized battery cables. Some cheap replacement cables have small gauge wire encased in thick insulation. The cables look the same size as the originals on the outside, but inside there is not enough wire to handle the amps.
If the headlights continue to shine brightly when you attempt to start the engine and nothing happens (no cranking), voltage is not reaching the starter. The problem here is likely an open or misadjusted park/neutral safety switch, a bad ignition switch, or a faulty starter relay or solenoid. Fuses and fusible links should also be checked because overloads caused by continuous cranking or jump starting may have blown one of these protective devices.
If the starter or solenoid clicks but nothing else happens when you attempt to start the engine, there may not be enough amps to spin the starter. Or the starter may be bad. A poor battery cable, solenoid or ground connection, or high resistance in the solenoid itself may be the problem. A voltage check at the solenoid will reveal if battery voltage is passing through the ignition switch circuit. If the solenoid or relay is receiving battery voltage but is not closing or passing enough amps from the battery to spin the starter motor, the solenoid ground may be bad or the contacts in the solenoid may be worn, pitted or corroded. If the starter cranks when the solenoid is bypassed, a new solenoid is needed, not a starter.
Most engines need a cranking speed of 200 to 300 rpm to start, so if the starter is weak and can't crank the engine fast enough to build compression, the engine won't start. In some instances, a weak starter may crank the engine fast enough but prevent it from starting because it draws all the power from the battery and does not leave enough for the injectors or ignition system.
If the lights dim and there is little or no cranking when you attempt to start the engine, the starter may be locked up, dragging or suffering from high internal resistance, worn brushes, shorts or opens in the windings or armature. A starter current draw test will tell you if the starter is pulling too many amps.
A good starter will normally draw 60 to 150 amps with no load on it, and up to 200 amps or more while cranking the engine. The no load amp draw depends on the rating of the starter while the cranking amp draw depends on the displacement and compression of the engine. Always refer to the OEM specs for the exact amp values. Some "high torque" GM starters, for example, may have a no load draw of up to 250 amps. Toyota starters on four-cylinder engines typically draw 130 to 150 amps, and up to 175 amps on six-cylinder engines.
An unusually high current draw and low free turning speed or cranking speed typically indicates a shorted armature, grounded armature or field coils, or excessive friction within the starter itself (dirty, worn or binding bearings or bushings, a bent armature shaft or contact between the armature and field coils). The magnets in permanent magnet starters can sometimes break or separate from the housing and drag against the armature.
A starter that does not turn at all and draws a high current may have a ground in the terminal or field coils, or a frozen armature. On the other hand, the start may be fine but can't crank the engine because the engine is seized or hydrolocked. So before you condemn the starter, try turning the engine over by hand. Won't budge? Then the engine is probably locked up.
A starter that won't spin at all and draws zero amps has an open field circuit, open armature coils, defective brushes or a defective solenoid. Low free turning speed combined with a low current draw indicates high internal resistance (bad connections, bad brushes, open field coils or armature windings).
If the starter motor spins but fails to engage the flywheel, the cause may be a weak solenoid, defective starter drive or broken teeth on the flywheel. A starter drive that is on the verge of failure may engage briefly but then slip. Pull the starter and inspect the drive. It should turn freely in one direction but not in the other. A bad drive will turn freely in both directions or not at all.
ENGINE CRANKS BUT WILL NOT START
When the engine cranks normally but won't start, you need to check ignition, fuel and compression. Ignition is easy enough to check with a spark tester or by positioning a plug wire near a good ground. No spark? The most likely causes would be a failed ignition module, distributor pickup or crank position (CKP) sensors
A tool such as an Ignition System Simulator can speed the diagnosis by quickly telling you if the ignition module and coil are capable of producing a spark with a simulated timing input signal. If the simulated signal generates a spark, the problem is a bad distributor pickup or crankshaft position sensor. No spark would point to a bad module or coil. Measuring ignition coil primary and secondary resistance can rule out that component as the culprit.
Module problems as well as pickup problems are often caused by loose, broken or corroded wiring terminals and connectors. Older GM HEI ignition modules are notorious for this. If you are working on a distributorless ignition system with a Hall effect crankshaft position sensor, check the sensor's reference voltage (VRef) and ground. The sensor must have 5 volts or it will remain permanently off and not generate a crank signal (which should set a fault code). Measure VRef between the sensor power supply wire and ground (use the engine block for a ground, not the sensor ground circuit wire). Don't see 5 volts? Then check the sensor wiring harness for loose or corroded connectors. A poor ground connection will have the same effect on the sensor operation as a bad VRef supply. Measure the voltage drop between the sensor ground wire and the engine block. More than a 0.1 voltage drop indicates a bad ground connection. Check the sensor mounting and wiring harness.
If a Hall effect crank sensor has power and ground, the next thing to check would be its output. With nothing in the sensor window, the sensor should be "on" and read 5 volts (VRef). Measure the sensor D.C. output voltage between the sensor signal output wire and ground (use the engine block again, not the ground wire). When the engine is cranked, the sensor output should drop to zero every time the shutter blade, notch, magnetic button or gear tooth passes through the sensor. No change in voltage would indicate a bad sensor that needs to be replaced.
If the primary side of the ignition system seems to be producing a trigger signal for the coil but the voltage is not reaching the plugs, a visual inspection of the coil tower, distributor cap, rotor and plug wires should be made to identify any defects that might be preventing the spark from reaching its intended destination.
ENGINE CRANKS AND HAS SPARK BUT WILL NOT START
If you see a good hot spark when you crank the engine, but it won't start, check for fuel. The problem might be a bad fuel pump
On an older engine with a carburetor, pump the throttle linkage and look for fuel squirting into the carburetor throat. No fuel? Possible causes include a bad mechanical fuel pump, stuck needle valve in the carburetor, a plugged fuel line or fuel filter.
On newer vehicles with electronic fuel injection, connect a pressure gauge to the fuel rail to see if there is any pressure in the line. No pressure when the key is on? Check for a failed fuel pump, pump relay, fuse or wiring problem. On Fords, don't forget to check the inertia safety switch which is usually hidden in the trunk or under a rear kick panel. The switch shuts off the fuel pump in an accident. So if the switch has been tripped, resetting it should restore the flow of fuel to the engine. Lack of fuel can also be caused by obstructions in the fuel line or pickup sock inside the tank. And don't forget to check the fuel gauge. It is amazing how many no starts are caused by an empty fuel tank.
There is also the possibility that the fuel in the tank may be heavily contaminated with water or overloaded with alcohol. If the tank was just filled, bad gas might be causing the problem.
On EFI-equipped engines, fuel pressure in the line does not necessarily mean the fuel is being injected into the engine. Listen for clicking or buzzing that would indicate the injectors are working. No noise? Check for voltage and ground at the injectors. A defective ECM may not be driving the injectors, or the EFI power supply relay may have called it quits. Some EFI-systems rely on input from the camshaft position sensor to generate the injector pulses. Loss of this signal could prevent the system from functioning.
Even if there is fuel and it is being delivered to the engine, a massive vacuum leak could be preventing the engine from starting. A large enough vacuum leak will lean out the air/fuel ratio to such an extent that the mixture won't ignite. An EGR valve that is stuck wide open, a disconnected PCV hose, loose vacuum hose for the power brake booster, or similar leak could be the culprit. Check all vacuum connections and listen for unusual sucking noises while cranking.
ENGINE HAS FUEL AND SPARK BUT WILL NOT START
An engine that has fuel and spark, no serious vacuum leaks and cranks normally should start. The problem is compression. If it is an overhead cam engine with a rubber timing belt, a broken timing belt would be the most likely cause especially if the engine has a lot of miles on it. Most OEMs recommend replacing the OHC timing belt every 60,000 miles for preventative maintenance, but many belts are never changed. Eventually they break, and when they do the engine stops dead in its tracks. And in engines that lack sufficient valve-to-piston clearance as many import engines and some domestic engines do, it also causes extensive damage (bent valves and valvetrain components & sometimes cracked pistons).
Overhead cams can also bind and break if the head warps due to severe overheating, or the cam bearings are starved for lubrication. A cam seizure may occur during a subzero cold start if the oil in the crankcase is too thick and is slow to reach the cam (a good reason for using 5W-20 or 5W-30 for winter driving). High rpm cam failure can occur if the oil level is low or the oil is long overdue for a change.
With high mileage pushrod engines, the timing chain may have broken or slipped. Either type of problem can be diagnosed by doing a compression check and/or removing a valve cover and watching for valve movement when the engine is cranked.
A blown head gasket may prevent an engine from starting if the engine is a four cylinder with two dead cylinders. But most six or eight cylinder engines will sputter to life and run roughly even with a blown gasket. The gasket can, however, allow coolant to leak into the cylinder and hydrolock the engine.
How long does it take till you can start after engine flooding?
There are a lot of variables that determine the amount of time you need to wait.
* Condition of fuel is one of the more serious potential problems, with older fuel taking much longer to clear out and presenting a greater potential for flooding. * Poor engine compression will also make flooding into a much worse problem. * As will a weak ignition system In general, most injected (EFI) engines do not "flood" unless something is wrong with one or more injectors.
Once you've discovered which has caused the problem, try a little starting fluid. The ether in the starting fluid is so much more volatile that it will often start the engine even if other problems exist, and of course, once the engine starts, even with the starting fluid, it will clear out the flooding problem.
How do you install fuel injectors on 1993 Nissan 300ZX?
Ok all of that that the last guy said was all to scare you away. For reference for future browsers looking to replace the injectors...
This was my first try doing this and I only owned the car for 2 weeks. You can get fuel hoses from your local auto store for 5 bucks for like 3 foot so that's chump change and it's good to to that anyways. Also when you get to replace the vac hoses that's chump change so get it out of your head how much it cost because if you start drilling and doing stupid stuff like the last guy said, you will be spending hours replacing the injectors so here's the simplified way...
Time: 1h - 1h 45m Give or take (EVEN FOR FIRST TIMERS)
1. Remove the Two plastic intake elbows off the throttle bodies
2. remove the black crossover from the top of the intake along with hoses that connect to it.
3. Remove all hoses that connect to the intake period.
4. Remove all bolts connecting the upper intake to the lower
5. Remove the TPS Sensor of the driver side (2 bolts)
6. Remove the throttle cables both pedal and cruise
Double check everything that you've disconnected from the intake and start removing the intake. You should now have access to your lower intectors.
1. Get a deep, large well Philips head screwdriver(If you are using a walmart brand, go find another) and remove the two screws holding the inectors.
2. From there it is a straight pull setup.
If the bolts are a bit stuck then use a bit of PB
Take your old one's out, replace them with the others and reverse the uninstallation to install your stuff back.
Where is the fuel shut off switch on a 1994 ford econoline conversion van?
try looking on the passenger side side panel under the dashboard should be a little black button?
Hello,I am living in Europe the Netherlands and my wife drives a '94 e150 hightop conversion van. We had a similar airbag lamp problem. we also had (not always) a problem with engaging the cruise control on the steering wheel. After a year the horn did not work.For us this was the signal that the spring coil in the steering wheel was not working. The spring coiul is a need design that connects the electrical things on the steering wheel (horn, airb, cruise) to the fixed steering colomn/chassis.A springcoil costs about USD 90,=Regards,Jan Valk
Where is fuse box on 1996 econoline van?
I believe it is under the steering column , behind a panel that has quick release
fasteners
Show fuse box for 1997 ford van?
Click on the link below
Click on Owner Guides
The Owner Guide ( which includes the fuse box diagram ) can be viewed online
How much does a 2001 Ford E250 Econoline Extended Cargo van weight?
Around 5000 lbs. depending on the exact configuration.
Where is the cruise control fuse located on a 1991 Ford E-150?
I have a 1991 E350 and the fuses are under the dash drivers side. Cruise control fuse is labelled in owners manual. My fuse is good and my cruise is not working. I do not get the "cruise" light to come on either. I am going to check the steering wheel spider as suggested somewhere else. Its accessible by removing two bolts in back of steering wheel(?). Repeating what I saw on another question. Be sure to disconnect battery and wait 5 minutes to prevent air bag from deploying before removing bolts. I have already checked the actuator arm to the fuel injection system and it is not broken and looks as if it is OK.
I don't know what year your car is, but a common problem with moisture is the spark plug wires. Replace them with new ones.
How do you replace a horn in a 2000 Hyundai Elantra wagon?
1.To access the horn the left front turn signal/parking light housing must be removed.On models with two horns the bumper cover must first be removed for access to the right side horn 2.Disconnect the electrical connectors and remove the bracket bolts
How do you fix a Hose leak from the rear of the motor on a 89 Buick regal?
There is a long steel tube that runs from the heater core to the engine. This tube tends to rust through in which case you should replace it. The tube itself is not that expensive, but it's tricky to replace. You'll need to remove the alternator and the dog bone engine mounts. Rock the engine as far forward as possible and replace the tube. Russtech67
Clearing the abs light on a E-150 van?
How do you clear the abs light on a Ford E-150 van year 2000. Light stayed on after replacing the front brakes.
Where is the fuel reset switch located on a 1992 Cadillac Seville?
no "reset switch" on these cars the powertrain control module controls the fuelpump via a relay
How do you install a fuel injector in a 1991 eagle talon?
Unhook your wiring harness from injectors and other sensors. Unbolt two bolts on intake holding the cables. Then unbolt fuel rail and unplug spark plug wires from coil and you should be able to wiggle fuel rail out as long as you take bolts out of rail before trying to pull it out. then just pull injectors from rail..
Where is the oil filter located on a 1999 ford econoline van?
On the V6, It's located at the front of the engine. You get down on your back and look up beyond the front crossmember at the front of the engine and there it'll be. Good Luck, Terry
Why is Heater fan on 1995 ford van only working on high?
My 1994 did the same thing.....the problem was in the high/low switch....
What does the oil pressure sender units do?
The oil pressure of an engine can be an important diagnostic tool for the car owner. If the oil pressure is always too low then it may indicate worn bearings that are letting too much oil through. If the oil pressure drops intermittently and then recovers, especially when going through a corner, it could be telling the driver that his oil level is low. Oil that has been compromised (i.e. by getting water in it from a head gasket leak, etc.) will have a different pressure than normal oil. Any changes from the observed normal oil pressure range should be cause to have a look under the hood. Cold oil will have a different pressure range than oil which is hot as a result of warming the vehicle up. This is considered normal.
The purpose of the oil pressure sender is to sense the oil pressure in an engine and to send this information over electrical wires to a gauge, generally located on the dash panel of a vehicle. In order to measure the oil pressure, the sender must be exposed directly to the pressurized oil. Engines generally have a threaded hole in them which taps into a pressurized oil passage within the engine. The oil pressure sender screws into this hole. If the oil pressure sender is removed and the engine is started, oil will squirt out the hole under pressure.
An oil pressure sender generally works by mechanically moving the wiper arm of a rheostat (i.e. a variable resistor) in direct proportion with the pressure applied to the sender. Thus, oil pressure senders are generally larger than other common senders like water temperature. The variable resistor changes the current that is sent to the remote gauge. That current goes through a coil which creates a magnetic field used to deflect the gauge needle.
An oil pressure sender should not be confused with an oil pressure switch. The sender sends analog data in the form of varying current to the remote gauge whereas an oil pressure switch is a binary sensor - it is either open or closed. Thus you cannot connect an oil pressure switch to an oil pressure gauge. Only a sender can be connected to the gauge. Oil pressure switches are often used to control so called "idiot lights" on the dashboard. When the oil pressure gets below a certain level the oil pressure switch closes thus providing a ground to the indicator light or other circuit that is monitoring the switch.
How do you install a 351 ford engine?
If you have to ask its better that you take it to a tech to make sure it will run