Our daughter's truck suddenly developed this issue last week. The history was:
I'm heading over Sunday to take a look. I'm wondering if something might have happened to the shift linkage?
Well if not a converter I put money on the pump ain't pumping. Since it's a '10, that should be a 6r80.... so yea a pump.
Investigate the doodad that connects the valve body to the pump output. If it's the zf derived one, they crack deliver air instead of fluid.
I forget the specifics, but it's a big thing.
Edit: search transmission valve body seal. Found one on Amazon. They split.
Thanks guys! I'll take a peek to make sure it's nothing simple, but it sounds like it'll be getting towed to the shop.
I just checked out the truck. It seems the shift cable is broken internally, and it must be stuck in some gear other than park.
I'm guessing it likely failed due to the steep hill they have to park on.
I've noticed that in a lot of autotragics if you let the park pawl take most of the parking load instead of the handbrake, it can take a lot of force to get back out of park. Years of that could be hard on the cable. So I try to park slushbox cars by engaging the handbrake first, letting off the brake pedal to ensure the handbrake is holding it, and then putting it in Park.
In reply to GameboyRMH :
Good point. I know they use the parking brake, but I didn't think to ask their order of operation.
Ford does, and always has, built some crap shifter mechanisms.
As to the parking brake, I often repair rear brakes after a new owner or driver uses the parking brake for the first time since the vehicle arrived in Saskatchewan.
Flat, you know.
In reply to Streetwiseguy :
Have you seen the thing they do now on the F150, where the lever is just a switch?
Shut the vehicle off in gear and the shifter will move itself to Park.
I thought this was just the console hideaway shifter, but to column shifters do it too. I still have to upload that video.
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