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Dodge Dakota Stalling and Dying Problems

68 messages, Last post on Nov 05, 2009 at 4:17 PM
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Replying to: mrsincere7 (Mar 20, 2009 3:50 pm) Thank you for the update. Are you in a cold weather part of the country? Regards, Dusty
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Replying to: dustyk (Mar 22, 2009 10:54 am) Well that depends. I wouldnt consider it a consistent cold weather part of the country. I live in New Jersey. And lately it's been cold. We had less than 10 degrees F 2 months ago. Now were in the high teens to low 50's. F. Is your question related to my problem possibly being poor performance of the IAC during cold weather? FYI, I bought my Dakota in October 2008. It had 105,000 and now has 108,000. I believe I noticed the stalling way back in October, but assumed it needed a tune-up or something else. It wasnt until recently, I started looking into other causes. Of course I always find a wealth of information here ( especially from you ) , and thats why I did a little research here and found what I needed.
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Replying to: mrsincere7 (Mar 22, 2009 7:22 pm) Regards, Dusty
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Replying to: dustyk (Mar 26, 2009 2:00 pm) |
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Replying to: cmccurdy (Feb 26, 2008 7:42 am) |
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I've owned my 1992 dakota 4x4 5.2 since new and haven't experienced too many problems until recently. It has 192000kms on it and have replaced the transmission, radiator, & water pump. The tranmission hasn't operated as it should since the rebuild by Mr. Transmission, the water temperature hasn't been what it should (both from reading the gauge and inside heater temperature) since replacing oem rad with an aftermarket one, oil pressure switch was replaced as low or flucutating oil pressure was observed, and now the largest and most annoying problem of all has been determining the problem of stalling, rough running backfiring hard starting, intermittent starting, being more than likely due to a faulty crankshaft position sensor. Replaced with a used one from wreking yard didn't last more than a couple of hours and died. Guess it'll be worth spending a few extra dollars on a new oem replacement and see if it last a bit longer? Other than that it has been a good and enjoyable truck.
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Replying to: moparlover3 (Apr 25, 2009 6:36 pm) Crankshaft Position Sensors were of irratic quality in your vintage Mopar motor. Fortunately, after the initial replacements you don't hear of too many failing a second time. Still see a number of old Daks on the road. There are two of your vintage in my neighborhood, both have over 180,000 miles on them. A little rusty in spots, but looking a heck of a lot better than any eight-year-old S10!! Best regards, Dusty |
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The following list of symptoms associated with defective Throttle Position Sensors (TPS) on Dodge trucks are a compilation of actual field experiences, both observed and reported: off-idle hesitation hesitation at speed rough engine idle intermittent rough engine idle rough idle then stalls engine RPM fluctuates at idle engine RPM flairs after start, then stalls engine stalls when placed into any gear engine stalls after start unless throttle pedal used engine stalls when throttle opened engine surges at speed engine performance poor: engine misfires under load/acelleration irratic shifts irratic torque converter unlocking irratic or over sensitive 6-5 downshifts at speed (68RFE) irratic or over sensitive 5-4 downshifts at speed (545RFE) irratic or over sensitive 4-3 downshifts at speed (RE, RLE) 3-4 driveline clunk delayed 1-2 shift delayed 3-4 upshift 3-4 upshifts occurs abruptly after 2-3 shift no 3-4 upshift no 4-3 downshift no kickdown at speed no or irratic torque converter lock up no or irratic overdrive shift Regards, Dusty |
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| I have a 2000 Dodge Dakota Sport with the V6 magnum, 3.9L and 4X4. The dealer replaced the engine just before I bought it. Both the vehicle and engine have about 89000 miles. Until recently I haven't had any problems with it. The issues that I'm starting to have are squealing belts and stalling. The belts, I replaced the tension pulley and the belt, but it still squeals. The stalling is the problem that worries me most. It only seems to happen, though, on slow left turns, whether the AC is running or not. It seems to idle right aroud 600-700 RPM. And after it stall, it's a pain to get restarted. Could these problems be linked? | |
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| Hi all, I have a 1990 Dodge Dakota 3.9 V6 Automatic. I have an issue where after starting the truck and letting it run for about 15 minutes it stalls and will not start for about another 30-45 minutes. Now I've replaced everything that I thought it might be and still havent solved the problem. I've replaced the ECM, distributor cap and rotor, auto shutdown relay, fuel pump, fuel filter, coolant temp sensor, and I dont know where to go from here. Please anyone or maybe a mechanic, if you have any info on this I would greatly appreciate it because I'm seconds away from driving it into a lake! Thanks, Mike | |
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