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Ranger ECM identification


Drive Maine

New Member
Joined
Jun 27, 2019
Messages
2
City
Maine
Vehicle Year
1994?
Transmission
Manual
Hello all, new to the forum and have a unique situation. I do not own a Ranger however my 1964 Austin FX4 London Taxi has had a 2.3 ranger engine fitted for better economy and reliability...until now unfortunately. Long story short...I hit a large pothole after fueling up which split open a fuel line (Maine has big potholes and this was unavoidable). It also jarred the inertia switch to trip. Both no big deal or so I thought. I reset the inertia switch replaced the broken line and tried to start. No dice. No fuel pump noise either. Checked fuses and noted the ECM fuse had blown. Replace fuse...blew again. I have since checked wiring and grounds to the fuel pump, and cleaned up some of them if they looked suspect. Checked for broken wires to the ecm and replaced a nasty looking splice. I swapped the inertia switch as well and noted that the grey/orange wire from it has been cut and taped (from what I understand this is to a dashboard warning light that obviously my cab does not have, not sure if that’s true.). I also checked the ignition switch and behind the dash for chaffing and found nothing. I am sort of at a loss as I do not work on cars with all these control modules as on this (we own a fleet of classic cars we use for weddings and the cab is one of our most popular) and I really could use some help in how to test if it is the ecm causing the fuse to blow and the fuel pump to not run. I have the numbers to the ecm but am not sure if this is an identification label if it needs to be replaced. Thank you very much in advance
 
The numbers on that label will help ID the unit when it needs replaced. There should be a particular one that takes the form of XXXX-12A650-XX. That one is the Ford part number, the rest give information about the calibration and software revision level.

The best way to test if a failed component is causing a fuse to blow is to find ALL components serviced by the fuse, unhook all of them, and turn the key on. If the fuse blows then it is a wiring issue. If it doesn't, start hooking things up one at a time until it does. Do NOT connect the computer plug while the key is on, that is a good way to damage it if it isn't already.
 
Thank you for the response, so I disconnected the ecm wiring (the large one with the pins) and put another fuse in the #2 position and turned the ignition on and the fuse still blew. I am thinking that the ecm is out of the equation as the fault as only the other components that this fuse is used with are still hooked up. I believe this engine to be out of a ‘97 Ranger. Would there be a reference to the components used in conjunction with this fuse be available.....and to think my British car wiring was bad! I’m in a whole new world with these more modern computers!
 

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