2002 ford explorer sport trac no start, no crank

Asked by Bigb52477 Aug 15, 2018 at 12:08 PM about the 2002 Ford Explorer Sport Trac 4WD Crew Cab

Question type: Maintenance & Repair

My daughter's sport trac has an intermittent issue.  
It will crank and run fine then at anytime it wont
crank or start.  When you turn the key it will click
and then the dash lights everything shuts off.  
Nothing electrical will work.  I can disconnect the
negative battery cable and it resets something so it
would normally start.  Yesterday it happened and
removing the battery cable did not get it to restart
but the dash lights came on and I got a click then
everything went dead again

2 Answers

64,500

Check the connections at the starter sounds like may have come loose.

1 people found this helpful.

Just put new starter and new battery. Same issue, no change. Also swapped out starter fuse 7.5 amp left side dash and swapped starter relay # 49 with # 48. Still not start. Nothing has fixed the issue.

Your Answer:

CarGurus Experts

  • #1
    Wayne Foy
    Reputation
    1,580
  • #2
    Jennifer Lowen
    Reputation
    680
  • #3
    Tracy Hooks
    Reputation
    650
View All

Find great deals from top-rated dealers

Search

Related Models For Sale

Used Ford Explorer
71 Great Deals out of 2,016 listings starting at $3,333
Used Ford F-150
336 Great Deals out of 13,399 listings starting at $3,000
Used Ford Ranger
19 Great Deals out of 651 listings starting at $8,999
Used Toyota Tacoma
30 Great Deals out of 723 listings starting at $9,975
Used Nissan Frontier
11 Great Deals out of 533 listings starting at $9,900
Used Chevrolet Silverado 1500
201 Great Deals out of 8,235 listings starting at $6,995
Used Ford Expedition
19 Great Deals out of 649 listings starting at $5,650
Used Toyota 4Runner
27 Great Deals out of 530 listings starting at $7,990
Used Chevrolet Tahoe
13 Great Deals out of 847 listings starting at $698
Used Ford Mustang
51 Great Deals out of 1,662 listings starting at $5,977
Used Jeep Wrangler
125 Great Deals out of 5,974 listings starting at $8,990
Used Toyota Highlander
36 Great Deals out of 807 listings starting at $8,495

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.