Stevo
Active Member
- First Name
- Steve
- Joined
- Jan 10, 2021
- Threads
- 2
- Messages
- 30
- Reaction score
- 23
- Location
- Vancouver Island BC
- Vehicle(s)
- 2020 Ford Ranger super crew Lariat
- Occupation
- retired
- Thread starter
- #1
I had all of these problems show up. I made a short trip through winding mountain roads using the trailer mode in my 2020 Ranger Lariat.
I pulled into the campsite and as I was backing the trailer in I noticed the check engine light was on. I was very surprised at this because I was so excited about the trip up to the campsite. The truck behaved beautifully in trailer mode, it made all the right shifts up and down and I was very impressed with everything. Usually I put the vehicle in sport mode and make most of the shifts manually, but this time I decided to the let the computer make the decisions and I was amazed at how wonderfully well that went.
So when it was time to go home after a few days, it was quite a different story. The engine light was still on and I had to manually shift my way home.
I took the truck into the dealership and was fortunate enough to have the head mechanic come out and do a scan to see why the engine light was on . He said it was an ERG ? code and it was the sensor was probably wet or something and it wasn't reading properly. Ok so the estimate to replace the sensor was over $300 for the sensor and one hours labour which brought the cost to around $500. (with taxes)
I decided to ponder this for awhile, In the meantime the truck would run smooth one day and the light would go out and then I would park the truck to go into a store and when I came out, the truck would not behave properly at all, It would jerk and stutter and it seemed the transmission was trying to shift all the time. I shut out most of the gears and it still seemed to be trying to shift all the time. I didn't know if I would make it out of the parking lot.
I went back to the dealership and took the Head mechanic for a spin and of course everything worked well. I was left frantically trying to find an older truck that didn't have all this technology. Screw the 10 speed give a three speed auto with a torque converter.
Any way, Yesterday I was lying in bed at 4:00 AM and started thinking about all of this problem. As I lay there I found myself recapping all of the things that were going on with the truck. I also remembered there had been some strange messages on the onboard computer screen about things being shut down to save the battery. I thought about this and began to wonder if the battery might have something to do with all of these problems I was having. It made sense actually, the truck was approaching 5 years old, blah blah blah. Thinking about the sensor issue the low voltage would probably be low enough to send a lowered voltage through the sensor giving and erroneous message on the fuel mixture which would make the transmission react and I thought I better check this out when I got out of bed.
When I got up that morning the first thing I did was take my multimeter and check the battery voltage. 12.3VDC! Not enough..
I went down to the local Lordco store and picked up a replacement battery with 800 CCA, AGM etc.
The truck is now running like the day I bought it. (fingers crossed) Go FIGURE.. Why wouldn't the service manager and the head mechanic think about that??
I'll let you know if my truck is still schizophrenic.
cheers
I pulled into the campsite and as I was backing the trailer in I noticed the check engine light was on. I was very surprised at this because I was so excited about the trip up to the campsite. The truck behaved beautifully in trailer mode, it made all the right shifts up and down and I was very impressed with everything. Usually I put the vehicle in sport mode and make most of the shifts manually, but this time I decided to the let the computer make the decisions and I was amazed at how wonderfully well that went.
So when it was time to go home after a few days, it was quite a different story. The engine light was still on and I had to manually shift my way home.
I took the truck into the dealership and was fortunate enough to have the head mechanic come out and do a scan to see why the engine light was on . He said it was an ERG ? code and it was the sensor was probably wet or something and it wasn't reading properly. Ok so the estimate to replace the sensor was over $300 for the sensor and one hours labour which brought the cost to around $500. (with taxes)
I decided to ponder this for awhile, In the meantime the truck would run smooth one day and the light would go out and then I would park the truck to go into a store and when I came out, the truck would not behave properly at all, It would jerk and stutter and it seemed the transmission was trying to shift all the time. I shut out most of the gears and it still seemed to be trying to shift all the time. I didn't know if I would make it out of the parking lot.
I went back to the dealership and took the Head mechanic for a spin and of course everything worked well. I was left frantically trying to find an older truck that didn't have all this technology. Screw the 10 speed give a three speed auto with a torque converter.
Any way, Yesterday I was lying in bed at 4:00 AM and started thinking about all of this problem. As I lay there I found myself recapping all of the things that were going on with the truck. I also remembered there had been some strange messages on the onboard computer screen about things being shut down to save the battery. I thought about this and began to wonder if the battery might have something to do with all of these problems I was having. It made sense actually, the truck was approaching 5 years old, blah blah blah. Thinking about the sensor issue the low voltage would probably be low enough to send a lowered voltage through the sensor giving and erroneous message on the fuel mixture which would make the transmission react and I thought I better check this out when I got out of bed.
When I got up that morning the first thing I did was take my multimeter and check the battery voltage. 12.3VDC! Not enough..
I went down to the local Lordco store and picked up a replacement battery with 800 CCA, AGM etc.
The truck is now running like the day I bought it. (fingers crossed) Go FIGURE.. Why wouldn't the service manager and the head mechanic think about that??
I'll let you know if my truck is still schizophrenic.
cheers
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