I'd always hoped that my first thread would be fir my very own Miata project, and it almost was, but alas, my employment situation took a drastic turn and now I'm basically a (really old) college freshman (starving student) instead. So, making zoom-zoom-zoom noises in my garage as I wrench on my long anticipated Miata project will have to wait.
So, probably to keep me from getting bored and lazy, my 23 year-old son went out and bought a 2001 WJ that has seen some.....interesting....repair work by the PO. I really wish he'd sought my advice before making this purchase, I could have found him a vehicle in much better condition for the same $$, but he didn't, so now I've got to deal with this thing. My son has many talents and abilities, but mechanical aptitude isn;t one of them. He tries, but he just missed out on that gene I guess. Lucky for him, I do have that ability. I grew up wrenching (farm kid) and while I'm not as good as a lot of the GRM members, I'm not too bad. I'm also old enough to know what my limits are.
The car in question is a 2001 Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo, 2WD with the 4.0 I-6. I have very little Jeep experience and none at all with the WJ platform. About the only thing I do know is that the Jeep 4.0 is one hell of an engine that will probably outlast just about any vehicle it's ever been put in. They have a pretty legendary reputation, which seems to be a common thread for American inline sixes in general. It runs well, and the transmission, which as I understand can be an issue in these vehicles seems solid. So far, so good.
That said, there are some issues...... Rather than root around on the various Jeep-specific forums , I thought that the GRM hive would be a better source for helpful advice. I know we have some Jeep WJ guys here, and after years of lurking here (thanks to Mazdeuce and his legendary R63 thread for getting me hooked), I just have more confidence in the information I get here than that from most other forums. So bear with me, as you might have already noticed, I tend to get a little wordy.......
I've already sorted out various annoying electrical issues, like intermittently non-working taillights, turn signals that sometimes don't....um...signal, and like that. Also replaced the high pressure power steering hose that was spraying fluid all over the place and going through about a quart of fluid every 50 miles or so.......
So here's what's next and also some of the questions I have that I'm hoping the GRM hive can point me in the right direction on.
The biggest issue with this sterling example of Jeep/Chrysler engineering is that the radiator shroud was butchered by the PO when the radiator was replaced at some point. Rather than removing the shroud the correct way, which I'll admit is (according to my youtube research) a bit of a PITA, he instead chose to basically cut off the entire bottom half of the shroud. Apprently and unsurprisingly, overheating became an issue at that point. The WJ has 2 cooling fans, one mechanical and one electric. Perhaps this is a common arrangement, but I can't honestly say I've ever seen it before, but most of my experience is with older (60's and 70's) American cars/trucks or with the same vintage Italian, German and British machines.
So now we get to the "sketchy" aspect of this WJ. To "solve" this over-heating problem he'd created by mangling the shroud, the PO turned to the electric fan. I'm guessing that, as designed, it was intended to be for supplementary cooling when the mechanical fan wasn't enough, particularly when the AC is in use, but that's just a guess on my part. In itself this isn't a terrible strategy, if you are too incompetent or lazy to just replace the shroud, like a normal person would. Most taking this route would use one of the many, cheap and easy to get universal fan controller/relay combinations available on Amazon for less than 50 bucks. But the PO wasn't "most people". His genius solution was, I kid you not, to wire the electric fan directly to the battery, I'll post pictures later, you have to see this..... One wire straight from the fan to the ground terminal of the battery, no connector, just wedged the wire in between the battery cable terminal and the post. Another wire was run from the positive battery terminal (using the same awesome connection method), through the firewall into the passenger compartment. A third wire from the passenger compartment to the other side of the electric fan completed the modification. Seriously, that's it. Not even a switch, much less a relay. When the fan was needed, the operation method was to twist the two wires, laying in tha passenger side footwell, together......and voila!!! Fan!!!! Quite possibly the sketchiest "repair" solution I've seen in a long time, outside of a demolition derby that is.... I literally spent about 30 min alternately laughing maniacally and staring in stunned disbelief. Wow. Just wow. I really need to get this solved, warm weather is coming and this is the Alabama Gulf Coast, if your cooling system isn't up to scratch, you are not going anywhere from May through October!!
I didn't have time right then to replace the shroud, also I didn't have one to replace it with, but I wasn't about to let him drive this thing as it was. I love my son, evn if (or perhaps because) he really frustrates me sometimes. I had a 15A SPST toggle switch lying around from something I'd built at some point, so on with some ring terminals (soldered of course, I hate crimp terminals), drill a hole in the panel right there to the right of the steering column and mount the switch right there. Horray!! The "WJ of death" is now at least 10% less sketchy.
A quick trip to my local pull-a-part netted me an undamaged fan shroud with the electric fan still attached, a bargain at $20. I think I'm going to become intimately familiar with this yard's inventory of WJ's in the near future. Lucky for me, they seem to have a good inventory of them.
So this weekend, on Sunday, I'll be continuing the "de-sketchification" process and replacing the fan shroud. I found a great YouTube video, 2 videos actually, the shows the radiator removal/replacement process very clearly and thoroughly. Awesome. Also not awesome. As I feared, it's going to involve a lot of disassembly/reassembly, pretty much the entire front end of the car, but it's all pretty simple stuff. I know from experience that getting the mechanical fan off of the water pump pulley will probably be a bit of a PITA but I can bodge up a pulley holder from a piece of flat-bar and while I don't own a 36mm open-end wrench, I do have a big freaking adjustable a 2lb hammer and a large vocabulary of curse words. Barring unforeseen disaster, always a possibility, I should be able to replace the shroud without too much difficulty.
If you've read this far, and I really can't imagine why you would, so thanks for that, I do have some questions that I'm hoping someone with some WJ experience can answer.
First, since the PO's "repair" pretty much trashed the stock connections and wiring for the electric fan, should I attempt to recreate/rebuild that circuit or would an aftermarket fan relay and temperature switch be a better way to go? Ideally I'd like to restore the stock wiring. I'm sure I can source the parts and connectors I'd need from the junkyard.
That brings me to my second question. Does anyone know where I can find a decent wiring diagram for this thing? I really have no idea how the electric fan is supposed to be wired, but I'm an electronics guy by trade and training. Give me a good diagram or schematic and I can figure it out.
Third, this WJ has ~175K miles on it. Since the access will never be better than during the shroud replacement process, should I consider replacing the water pump, belt tensioner and idler pulley "as long as I'm in there"? It would truly suck to tear this thing down, replace the shroud, then have to tear it all apart again a short while later to replace one of these items. My son is trying to find out from the PO if these have ever been replaced before and if so, when. I think that at this point, it's better if the PO and I remain strangers. I'm not sure I could refrainfrom asking snarky questions about his level of mechanical competence. I know some work on the cooling system, beyond the radiator replacement has been done, the filler neck has obviously been removed or replaced at some point judging by the copious amount of orange RTV seen there..... I can't really tell about the water pump, it's kind of hard to see down there.
And lastly, for now anyway, what are the other common failure items on these WJ's that I should be looking at? For good or bad, he's going to have to dive this thing for the foreseeable future, I'd like to get a head start on anything that is known to be problematic.
Thanks everyone for reading! While this is not the way I wanted to get my GRM thread history started, it is good to finally be posting my own thread.
I promise, there will be yet another Miata thread in the future, a genuine "build thread" with, most likely, all sorts of silliness and questionable decisions.....
Mike