I fired up the old IBM and added pics today.
Had a friend (who owns a '00 Tracker) tell me his front wheel drive had stopped working last fall. He told me a mechanic had told him his PCM needed replaced and the repair estimate was $800. That was what the CEL code reflected, anyway. My friend didn't have the $800 for the repair. I wouldn't have had $800 laying around for this repair either.
Long story short, I went to an area pick-n-pull and pulled an actuator pump off of a wrecked Tracker last Friday. The actuary pump is located (standing in front of the truck) on the left center behind the front bumper. Literally, it's mounted to the bumper inside. Took it home and hooked up the wires to a battery charger. It took right off. So I started his truck, engaged 4WD and checked his pump.... not running. So I shut off the truck, unplugged his pump and plugged the new "used" pump into his wiring, started the truck, engaged 4WD and whalla!!: he now has his 4WD restored... for $25. I checked the internet and the cheapest I could find a NEW pump was about $173.00 the highest was well over $200.
So I got to wondering about his old pump and why it had stopped working so I took it apart.
Two bolts (12mm) hold the bracket to the inside of the front bumper. Two rubber hoses are attached to the nozzles on the pump. One runs to the front diff to pressurize the actuator and the other appears to be a vent that exits on the top left side of the radiator next to the diff breather. Then there is one electrical connector which has a detent you press with your thumb and they slide apart (sometimes with more than a little effort). You can remove this pump in less than five minutes without needing jacks or ramps.
Frankly, I don't know why the hell they mounted this thing inside the front bumper right in harms way. Appears it would be "more" better to mount this pump inside the fender well on the battery side.
The pump:
Three phillips screws (with isolator bushings) hold the pump (which has a plastic housing) to the metal mounting bracket.
There are three wires running into the pump harness: red one (power), black (ground), and a pink one (runs from/to the PCM)
Once the pump is separated from the metal housing... there are four phillips screws that hold the electric motor to the pump housing. Remove them but DON'T attempt to separate the motor yet.
There is a square metal top crimped over the circuit board of the pump. I took a screw driver and pried the lips up on two sides and it popped the metal cover off. Inside the metal lid the plastic housing has a nice rubber gasket to prevent excessive moisture from entering.
With the cover removed you will see two small phillips screws holding the circuit board in place. Once these two screws are removed you can pull the circuit board out while pushing/feeding the three wires into the housing (thru a small three hole grommet) in order to to provide the slack for the circuit board to move upwards. There is a micro switch mounted directly under the circuit board and a black plastic housing clipped over the micro switch which has a plunger in it. Next to the circuit board is another coil. This coil and the circuit board are held together by a metal housing with crimped tabs that hold these parts firmly together.
Once the circuit board is out, look inside the housing you will see the end of the electric motor shaft is secured by a "c" clip to a small plastic piston rod that drives the diaphragm to generate air pressure. The motor has a cam secured to the shaft so the piston rod oscillates when the motor runs and drives the diaphragm. Remove the "c" clip and the motor will then separate from the housing.
In the case of this actuator pump, the red (power) wire had corroded and broken off the circuit board. I soldered it back on. A solder had also broken on the circuit board right over the micro switch. I soldered it. I put power to it and the pump sprung to life again.
Assembly is the reverse of the disassembly. I coated the rubber seals with a light coat of grease and re-crimped the metal cover.
The point to this thread is that:
a. bad actuary pumps can sometimes be repaired (I found one with a bad diaphragm and I couldn't repair it)
b. although these SOTF diffs set ups are a pain in the butt, there are really just three areas which normally fail that causes us to lose our front wheel drive: The actuator pump, a vacuum leak in a hose, or the actuary in the front diff leaks and won't hold pressure.
For $20-$30 bucks you can go to your local pick-n-pull, grab one, test it for function, then keep it in your spare parts when you're wheeling so IF you need it when you are out on the trail or snowy road, you got it. The only wreck I came across that didn't still have the actuary pump on it was wrecks that were missing the entire front bumper. I actually pulled one from a front end wreck that had severely bent the housing holding the actuary pump... but the pump still worked. These pumps are also inter-changeable within many years of 2nd gen Trackers/GVs. So you don't have to find your EXACT model year in the yard to find a pump that will work for you.
And finally, there are a few people who will say a used pump will fail eventually. I totally agree, but I can also swap out eight or nine used pumps before I would have the $170 plus dollars invested for the cost of a new pump (and a new pump can fail as well). I'm good with that.