'06 Ranger XLT 4.0 Battery or Alt?

15

Asked by sbrewer Sep 23, 2014 at 07:22 PM about the 2006 Ford Ranger XLT 2 Door SuperCab 4WD

Question type: Maintenance & Repair

Not enough juice to start one day, so I went and bought a new battery. Before I
installed it, I went ahead and did a slow charge on the old battery and cleaned the
terminals.  Started right up and worked for about two weeks. So I took the battery
back.

Then dead again. So now I am thinking alternator/regulator and bought one.

However, I am getting no warning light. I have had this since new and only 40K on it,
so I would really suspect the battery.

What to do? Should I just go ahead and install the alternator? I doubt I can return it if
it's installed.

6 Answers

2,905

If your alternator was bad the truck would drive while driving it seems to me you have a weak battery

2,905

If your alternator was bad the truck would die while driving it seems to me you have a weak battery

1 people found this helpful.
143,705

You need to go back and buy the new battery,if you ran a week with old one,it has a bad cell,and die,s over time.And alternator is good cause it toeted that bad battery for a week,change the battery will fix you.

2 people found this helpful.
Best Answer Mark helpful
15

Got a 5 year Interstate 59 series for $90. So far so good.....

1 people found this helpful.

Your Answer:

Ranger

Looking for a Used Ranger in your area?

CarGurus has 639 nationwide Ranger listings starting at $8,999.

Postal Code:

CarGurus Experts

  • #1
    Gene Arnett
    Reputation
    4,390
  • #2
    Bob Beaman
    Reputation
    3,000
  • #3
    Jennifer Gorham
    Reputation
    2,560
View All

Find great deals from top-rated dealers

Search

Related Models For Sale

Used Ford F-150
346 Great Deals out of 13,355 listings starting at $3,000
Used Toyota Tacoma
31 Great Deals out of 724 listings starting at $9,975
Used Chevrolet Colorado
37 Great Deals out of 1,220 listings starting at $5,942
Used Nissan Frontier
11 Great Deals out of 534 listings starting at $9,995
Used GMC Canyon
28 Great Deals out of 921 listings starting at $5,477
Used Chevrolet Silverado 1500
198 Great Deals out of 8,239 listings starting at $6,995
Used Toyota Tundra
35 Great Deals out of 987 listings starting at $10,698
Used Jeep Wrangler
132 Great Deals out of 5,983 listings starting at $8,990
Used Ford Mustang
57 Great Deals out of 1,668 listings starting at $5,977
Used GMC Sierra 1500
154 Great Deals out of 8,348 listings starting at $5,975
Used Toyota 4Runner
25 Great Deals out of 528 listings starting at $7,990
Used Dodge RAM 1500
95 listings starting at $9,594
Used Honda Ridgeline
19 Great Deals out of 579 listings starting at $4,942

Content submitted by Users is not endorsed by CarGurus, does not express the opinions of CarGurus, and should not be considered reviewed, screened, or approved by CarGurus. Please refer to CarGurus Terms of Use. Content will be removed if CarGurus becomes aware that it violates our policies.