What to do if your Dodge Durango is having transmission problems?

What to do if your Dodge Durango is having transmission problems?

So if you have a Dodge Durango or Dodge truck based on the same chassis and you’re having transmission issues like I described, you may want to change these sensors to see if the fix works for you too. There’s too high a temptation for a dealership or transmission shop to want to ‘over repair’ and hence over charge for a simple issue like this.

Are there any problems with a Dodge Durango 99?

I’ve been on a number of Dodge/Durango/Dakota web forums for 10+ years and have seen this problem many times. Aside from a couple of 98’s and 00’s, they’re all mostly 99’s. It’s not an uncommon problem.

Why does my 99 Durango have no bus code?

I was thinking a cold solder joint to the coil circuit as it had no spark during the no run condition. I have a 99 Durango 5.2l 4×4 with the Federal Emission PCM and have also had the NO BUS code in the odometer. Mine stalled while driving also and never started again ( to this day it still hasn’t started!)

Why is my PCM not working on my Dodge Durango?

The second post is from someone who had the no bus issue and got replacement PCMs for his non-alarm vehicle. Two of them didn’t work because they had the security feature enabled. So, if you do seek a used PCM, be VERY specific about whether the donor vehicle had the factory alarm/security option.

What should the ohms be on a Dodge Durango?

Ideally, it should read from about 800 ohms to 5 K-ohms and increase consistently while rotated in one direction. The sensor is easy to access on the side of the throttle body just under the air box.

Where can I get an oil change on my Dodge Durango?

I was impressed lately when I took it to a Grease Monkey, which is an oil change franchise common in Colorado, and learned that one of their other customers owns 2 Dodge Durangos of the same vintage as mine and each was approaching 300,000 miles with no major issues.

Where can I buy a Dodge Durango sensor?

These sensors are easy to find in local auto stores like O’Reilly, Autozone, NAPA, etc.. where they keep them in stock. My web search on the Autozone site assured me that the TPS333 (the model my 1999 Durango 5.9L used) was in stock at my local Autozone store.