dieseldoesit wrote:
Aren't you supposed to shift into (and out of ) 4lo when the vehicle is moving (slowly) and the transmission is in neutral?
Yes, that is what it says in the manual. And that's what I have always done. This time it did not budge no matter if I was moving or not.
ChooChooman74 wrote:
denvergrows wrote:
ATXKJ wrote:
the other problem tends to be mismatched tires front/rear
wear/ tire pressure ect - mismatch will stress the gearset and make shifting difficult
(backing up a bit tends to relieve pressure)
I will say this though. My Duratracs are about half life on them and I got a flat on the front drivers side about 3 weeks about. I put a plug in it because my spare is brand new and didn't want a brand new one on one side with a 50% on the other. I wasplanning to buy another new tire and replace both fronts so as not to put that strain on my gears. But From what I hear you saying, having 50%ers on the back and brand new on the front will cause damage? Or are you talking seriously different sized tires? Am I going to need to replace all 4 or just live with one patched?
Not to go too off topic, but am I the only one the rotates through the spare? I figure, why have a spare on the back just dry rotting away.
I bought them from a friend shortly after I got the jeep. He put a lift on his Jeep and went bigger. But he only had four. His spare was just a street tire. So we got the 4 from him for $250 and they were a little better that 50% back then. And just bought a new one as a spare.
naturist wrote:
dieseldoesit wrote:
Aren't you supposed to shift into (and out of ) 4lo when the vehicle is moving (slowly) and the transmission is in neutral?
That is the preferred way to do it. But you can do it standing still, you just have to first put the transmission in neutral, then move the transfer case lever, and finish by (still stopped) putting the tranny into both D and R while holding the brake.
If the OP took a hammer to the shift mech, I'd not be surprised if it did need replacing.
I mean you make it sound like I got under it with a mallet and used the ole,"it's not broken, I just haven't hit it hard enough yet" mentality. On the trail I got a signal on my phone and I read here (one of the first links to pop up when you google stuck in 4lo)
http://pgh-offroad.com/forum/showthread ... k-in-4-low a guy towards the bottom suggest tapping the linkage with a hammer to get it unstuck. So that's what I did. And it worked. At least so far as to get it back into 2wd. Other people talk about rocks being thrown up in the linkage. I didn't hit it anywhere near as hard as a rock would. So I feel fairly certain that didn't cause it. But it seems like that is the number one answer as to what is causing it. So I will accept responsibility for being the force that broke it. What do I do now though? It still shifts. Just not as smooth and it makes some noise. Should I leave well enough alone for now and see if it gets worse? Or if it does go out, will it take something else with?