rangerb4000
Member
Hello, I am trying to diagnose my truck before taking it apart or taking it somewhere. I believe it is lower manifold gaskets but would appreciate any input. I will do my best to explain what I've tried, and where I'm at.
Thank you in advance!
I got this truck in trade a few weeks ago, it's a 1999 mazda b4000 aka ford ranger 4.0 V6 OHV, ~165k.
CEL codes at the time were p0174+0171, running lean both banks, and p1506 IAC duty cycle high.
(also p0500 for vehicle speed sensor but assuming unrelated)
Looks clean under the hood and there appear to be new plugs, wires, and vac lines. fuel filter has also been changed. It was supposedly a daily driver and ran well at first, but RPMs were always higher than normal, which worried me. Then idle became rough, wanting to stall. heard whistling around the air filter box, changed loose air filter, disconnected battery and cleaned MAF and IAC with maf cleaner. after relearning idle, truck seemed to run perfectly at normal rpms for one day, then next day rough idle returned with surge/plunge/stall misfire that went away when engine warmed up. It was driveable locally for a few days.
Then (of course) coolant started leaking at the water pump weep hole so I took it to a shop, not wanting to tackle that in the single digit temps. asked them about the idle and they said it was acting like vacuum leak from intake manifold, but further diagnosis would be necessary. When I drove it home was running rough, always wanting to stall at low rpms.
Checked codes, and new ones were: P1131+1151 'lack of switches' indicates lean, P0113 Intake air temp sensor high bank 1, and p0136 02 sensor circuit bank 1 sensor 2.
(I believe all of these can point toward a massive vacuum leak? or bad MAF, but you'll see why I skipped that for now.)
When I started it the next morning, there was a new large steady leak of coolant below the rear of the engine, dripping from the bellhousing (pic below). Can't see exactly where it's coming from above that, but I am guessing somewhere on the passenger rear of the engine/compartment. There is nothing visually obvious that I can see from above. It's a significant amount of coolant dripping, only when truck is running.
I did a home-made smoke test (worked pretty well!) and smoke was coming up from beneath the coil pack. so a vacuum leak is definitely confirmed... I don't know if any vac lines run under there, if anyone is able to deduce more from the video, I'd appreciate it. (https://youtube.com/shorts/dJbWvDBLdvM?si=LvO8yW-GGNyr-Fie)
At this point I am pretty convinced that it is upper and/or lower intake manifold gaskets, and the leaky airbox hid it from me for a while, then when the coolant pressure was corrected, it finally blew an intake gasket... but I want to make sure I'm not overlooking another possibility. head gaskets? cracked heads? something like that? or a combination of unlucky unrelated things, like a bad MAF/IAC and a bad freeze plug...AND a vacuum leak?
Whether to attempt them myself is another question... it seems like a fair amount could go wrong with how much has to be taken apart, and a big job if that's not the problem.
Thank you in advance!
I got this truck in trade a few weeks ago, it's a 1999 mazda b4000 aka ford ranger 4.0 V6 OHV, ~165k.
CEL codes at the time were p0174+0171, running lean both banks, and p1506 IAC duty cycle high.
(also p0500 for vehicle speed sensor but assuming unrelated)
Looks clean under the hood and there appear to be new plugs, wires, and vac lines. fuel filter has also been changed. It was supposedly a daily driver and ran well at first, but RPMs were always higher than normal, which worried me. Then idle became rough, wanting to stall. heard whistling around the air filter box, changed loose air filter, disconnected battery and cleaned MAF and IAC with maf cleaner. after relearning idle, truck seemed to run perfectly at normal rpms for one day, then next day rough idle returned with surge/plunge/stall misfire that went away when engine warmed up. It was driveable locally for a few days.
Then (of course) coolant started leaking at the water pump weep hole so I took it to a shop, not wanting to tackle that in the single digit temps. asked them about the idle and they said it was acting like vacuum leak from intake manifold, but further diagnosis would be necessary. When I drove it home was running rough, always wanting to stall at low rpms.
Checked codes, and new ones were: P1131+1151 'lack of switches' indicates lean, P0113 Intake air temp sensor high bank 1, and p0136 02 sensor circuit bank 1 sensor 2.
(I believe all of these can point toward a massive vacuum leak? or bad MAF, but you'll see why I skipped that for now.)
When I started it the next morning, there was a new large steady leak of coolant below the rear of the engine, dripping from the bellhousing (pic below). Can't see exactly where it's coming from above that, but I am guessing somewhere on the passenger rear of the engine/compartment. There is nothing visually obvious that I can see from above. It's a significant amount of coolant dripping, only when truck is running.
I did a home-made smoke test (worked pretty well!) and smoke was coming up from beneath the coil pack. so a vacuum leak is definitely confirmed... I don't know if any vac lines run under there, if anyone is able to deduce more from the video, I'd appreciate it. (https://youtube.com/shorts/dJbWvDBLdvM?si=LvO8yW-GGNyr-Fie)
At this point I am pretty convinced that it is upper and/or lower intake manifold gaskets, and the leaky airbox hid it from me for a while, then when the coolant pressure was corrected, it finally blew an intake gasket... but I want to make sure I'm not overlooking another possibility. head gaskets? cracked heads? something like that? or a combination of unlucky unrelated things, like a bad MAF/IAC and a bad freeze plug...AND a vacuum leak?
Whether to attempt them myself is another question... it seems like a fair amount could go wrong with how much has to be taken apart, and a big job if that's not the problem.
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