Ok, guys, let me preface this by saying that I know nothing about cars and most things I read on this forum come across as a foreign language to me. Seeing that there is so much knowledge on this site, I would like to run this problem by you so when I take my TJ to the repair shop, I can run your knowledge past the mechanic. I have researched this problem and some have had similar problems, but none of the posts were ever updated with what the actual cause ended up being.
So, this weekend I went wheeling in my 2000 TJ. four times during my ride, which lasted about five hours, the TJ took off on its own. If it wasn't for my cat like reflexes and hitting the brake and hand brake, I would have taken out a couple parked Rubicons and a tree. (Easy way to get banned from the Jeep club). Every time it happened, I was in 4x4 low. The first time, I was going down a steep hill, foot on and off the brake, no accelerator, and it suddenly revved up and then drove forward quickly, maybe 3-5 feet. I have no idea how far it would have driven on its own if I hadn't hit the brake. Once I hit the brake and handbrake, the TJ stopped as well as the revving. The second time I had just started it, put it in drive, no gas, just let off the brake, and again it revved and took off. The third time was the same but I was in reverse. And the 4th time I had just stopped, brake on, and was getting reading to put it in park and the engine revved. I put it in park and it stopped. I found it interesting that the revving and its desire to drive stopped once I hit the brake, so there was no sign that it was trying to push through my braking. It would have been nice to have been in an open field where I could have let it play out and see if it is just lunging forward briefly or if it would have continued on its own.
I bought the TJ a few months back and the previous owner had put a new 4.0l 6 in it and it currently has about 4k miles on it. The engine compartment is clean enough to eat off of. Automatic tranny rebuilt about 10k miles ago and it has cruise control if that matters. The Jeep guys I was with visually inspected it and saw nothing obvious. I was too busy crapping my pants so I wasn't able to see what the RPMs were at when it happened.
Any ideas? If you have additional questions, I will try to answer them, but all I pretty much know about the Jeep is that its yellow.
So, this weekend I went wheeling in my 2000 TJ. four times during my ride, which lasted about five hours, the TJ took off on its own. If it wasn't for my cat like reflexes and hitting the brake and hand brake, I would have taken out a couple parked Rubicons and a tree. (Easy way to get banned from the Jeep club). Every time it happened, I was in 4x4 low. The first time, I was going down a steep hill, foot on and off the brake, no accelerator, and it suddenly revved up and then drove forward quickly, maybe 3-5 feet. I have no idea how far it would have driven on its own if I hadn't hit the brake. Once I hit the brake and handbrake, the TJ stopped as well as the revving. The second time I had just started it, put it in drive, no gas, just let off the brake, and again it revved and took off. The third time was the same but I was in reverse. And the 4th time I had just stopped, brake on, and was getting reading to put it in park and the engine revved. I put it in park and it stopped. I found it interesting that the revving and its desire to drive stopped once I hit the brake, so there was no sign that it was trying to push through my braking. It would have been nice to have been in an open field where I could have let it play out and see if it is just lunging forward briefly or if it would have continued on its own.
I bought the TJ a few months back and the previous owner had put a new 4.0l 6 in it and it currently has about 4k miles on it. The engine compartment is clean enough to eat off of. Automatic tranny rebuilt about 10k miles ago and it has cruise control if that matters. The Jeep guys I was with visually inspected it and saw nothing obvious. I was too busy crapping my pants so I wasn't able to see what the RPMs were at when it happened.
Any ideas? If you have additional questions, I will try to answer them, but all I pretty much know about the Jeep is that its yellow.
