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#1
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Car will not start in cold weather, Why?
I have a Ford Explorer and it will not start when it dips into the 20s.
It has about 50,000 miles and is a 1999. The battery is fine and the engine cranks. When the weather warms back up it starts fine. I used to drive an old car and I had to set the choke in cold weather, but I thought it was automatic in the newer cars. Does anyone have any ideas? Thanks |
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#2
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Aaron wrote:
> I have a Ford Explorer and it will not start when it dips into the 20s. > It has about 50,000 miles and is a 1999. The battery is fine and the > engine cranks. When the weather warms back up it starts fine. I used to > drive an old car and I had to set the choke in cold weather, but I > thought it was automatic in the newer cars. Does anyone have any ideas? > Thanks ------------------------------ Doesn't your F.O.R.D. owner's manuals say it's OK to hold the pedal part-way to the floor in very cold weather? It does in the Honda manuals , for that vintage. Have you read your manual? The engine needs AIR to start, and when it's spinning slow, it needs a little help from the owner. 'Curly' |
#3
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No, I have not read the manual. Good idea! Wish I would have thought
about that. I guess holding the pedal half way down sets the choke? |
#4
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Aaron wrote:
> I have a Ford Explorer and it will not start when it dips into the 20s. > It has about 50,000 miles and is a 1999. The battery is fine and the > engine cranks. When the weather warms back up it starts fine. I used to > drive an old car and I had to set the choke in cold weather, but I > thought it was automatic in the newer cars. Does anyone have any ideas? > Thanks I know what's wrong. It's a Ford! Found On the Road Dead! ;-) Seriously, I know quite a few people with newer Fords, GMs and especially Chryslers who have had problems starting in cold weather. On the other hand, my '93 Honda Accord has 219,000 km (136,000 miles) on it, and it has never, EVER failed to start in cold weather, even in the serious deep freezes we have had here over the last few winters. |
#5
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You realize this is a Honda group, right? We don't discriminate, though
On my father in law's F250 not starting in cold weather was related to the viscosity of the oil used. In other words, he'd use a thinner oil in winter months so it could crank easier. With thicker oil, it had to work too hard where the battery just could not supply reasonable current to the other parts. Or you could just trade that ford in for a Honda Remco |
#6
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Aaron wrote:
> I have a Ford Explorer and it will not start when it dips into the > 20s. It has about 50,000 miles and is a 1999. The battery is fine > and the engine cranks. When the weather warms back up it starts fine. > I used to drive an old car and I had to set the choke in cold > weather, but I thought it was automatic in the newer cars. Does > anyone have any ideas? Thanks does the starter moves, if yes-try using engine oil 5w-40, and install the block heater |
#7
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Have it looked at with an OBD2 scanner. You probably have a bad sensor
causing the mixture to be wrong when cold. Guessing at these problems could cost you a fortune and never fix it. "Aaron" > wrote in message ups.com... >I have a Ford Explorer and it will not start when it dips into the 20s. > It has about 50,000 miles and is a 1999. The battery is fine and the > engine cranks. When the weather warms back up it starts fine. I used to > drive an old car and I had to set the choke in cold weather, but I > thought it was automatic in the newer cars. Does anyone have any ideas? > Thanks > |
#8
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Aaron wrote:
> I have a Ford Explorer and it will not start when it dips into the 20s. > It has about 50,000 miles and is a 1999. The battery is fine and the > engine cranks. When the weather warms back up it starts fine. I used to > drive an old car and I had to set the choke in cold weather, but I > thought it was automatic in the newer cars. Does anyone have any ideas? It's not a Honda. |
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