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    Uphill Acceleration

    I know these things are heavy cars...But is it normal for a Grand Marq to kind of top out at about 30-35mph going up steeper grades? I can't get it to move faster than that unless I smash my foot to the floor. It won't shift and continue acceleration. Hell, it doesn't even seem like the engine RPMs change at all no matter how much gas I put to it.

    I really hope this isn't normal? But the tranny is new as of last October.


    sigpic
    - 2004 Ford Thunderbird - 2006 Ford F150 XLT - 2018 Ford Explorer Limited - 1958 Mercury Medalist

    #2
    That's 150hp for ya

    Lower rear end gears help a lot with this...
    1983 Grand Marquis 2Dr Sedan "Mercules"
    Tremec TKO conversion, hydraulic clutch, HURST equipped!

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      #3
      What he said - 3.08 rear gears might be great for freeway driving, but if you're gonna tow stuff or live in an area with plenty of hills you may wanna swap them for something numerically higher. My car doesn't seem to have a problem climbing up steep grades (even from a standstill), but I still avoid straining her like that - instead I just pick up speed on the way downhill, and use the inertia to get me over the next uphill. Better on gas this way too.

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        #4
        My car is the same way, it refuses to downshift unless you floor it. So I downshift for it. Just remember to put it back in drive once you get up the hill.
        -Matt
        1968 Fairlane 500 - 1998 Camaro Z/28

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          #5
          Originally posted by Grand_Marquis_GT
          That's 150hp for ya

          Lower rear end gears help a lot with this...
          155 actually
          2000 Grand Marquis LS
          2000 F150 XLT 6 inches of lift.
          1987 Bill Blass Mark VII - Sold
          1985 Mercury Grand Marquis Colony Park- SOLD. to a little old lady
          Mercury Owners Group member
          Save The Whales, Restore an Old Station Wagon!!

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            #6
            Originally posted by nitroracer
            My car is the same way, it refuses to downshift unless you floor it. So I downshift for it. Just remember to put it back in drive once you get up the hill.
            You can adjust that you know?
            2000 Grand Marquis LS
            2000 F150 XLT 6 inches of lift.
            1987 Bill Blass Mark VII - Sold
            1985 Mercury Grand Marquis Colony Park- SOLD. to a little old lady
            Mercury Owners Group member
            Save The Whales, Restore an Old Station Wagon!!

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              #7
              Your car must have issues, my 2.73 and 3.08 geared cars never had any issues with hills. I also make sure to downshift. TV cable/rod must need adjustment.
              Builder/Owner of Badass Panther Wagons

              Busy maintaining a fleet of Fords

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                #8
                Originally posted by 85MercPark
                155 actually
                No, 150HP if you have the single exhaust, and 160HP for dual. I don't know what the torque difference for single and dual is, which is what maters for acceleration. Horsepower helps more at high speeds.
                88 Town Car (wrecked, for sale)
                Walker OEM duals with muffler deletes

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                  #9
                  It is adjusted. I dont shift into OD until about 60mph. It just doesnt like to downshift.
                  -Matt
                  1968 Fairlane 500 - 1998 Camaro Z/28

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                    #10
                    Originally posted by 88Vic
                    No, 150HP if you have the single exhaust, and 160HP for dual. I don't know what the torque difference for single and dual is, which is what maters for acceleration. Horsepower helps more at high speeds.
                    Nope, 155, the 85 wagons had 155 with single exhaust.
                    2000 Grand Marquis LS
                    2000 F150 XLT 6 inches of lift.
                    1987 Bill Blass Mark VII - Sold
                    1985 Mercury Grand Marquis Colony Park- SOLD. to a little old lady
                    Mercury Owners Group member
                    Save The Whales, Restore an Old Station Wagon!!

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Originally posted by MeLikeyStripperChicks
                      What he said - 3.08 rear gears might be great for freeway driving, but if you're gonna tow stuff or live in an area with plenty of hills you may wanna swap them for something numerically higher. My car doesn't seem to have a problem climbing up steep grades (even from a standstill), but I still avoid straining her like that - instead I just pick up speed on the way downhill, and use the inertia to get me over the next uphill. Better on gas this way too.
                      yeah same with me going fast down hill Also helps with higher gears I thankful I have 3.55 gears

                      1989 mercury grand marquis gs / 2014 ford focus s daily driver
                      302 lopo with ho upper/ aod with trans go shift kit
                      k code 3:55 posi rear/big brake swap tow package car

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                        #12
                        Originally posted by 85MercPark
                        Nope, 155, the 85 wagons had 155 with single exhaust.
                        Well, he has an 88 Grand Marquis, not an 85 wagon. And I think his car has the single exhaust, which after a couple days will drive you crazy listening to that god-awful sound.
                        88 Town Car (wrecked, for sale)
                        Walker OEM duals with muffler deletes

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                          #13
                          A shift kit will also help it downshift. At the tiniest strain my tranny will downshift. It can get annoying but I can power through most anything.

                          2009 Ford F-350 6.4 powerstroke diesel. 1977 Ford F-150 built 300 six, 5 speed trans. 1976 MG MGB roadster, 359w, t5 5 speed. 1996 Kawasaki ninja ZX6R.
                          My rod is glowing, my bead is clean, my middle name is acetylene

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                            #14
                            Originally posted by mrltd
                            Your car must have issues, my 2.73 and 3.08 geared cars never had any issues with hills. I also make sure to downshift. TV cable/rod must need adjustment.
                            I'm with him, I had a s10 blazer with a 2:73 posi and a 2.8liter TBI v6 that managed to maintain a top speed of 43mph on the steepest of hills.

                            Is your foot to the floor when your climbing these hills? Is the engine screaming (4000 rpms) or does it sound quiet or low, such as when your first shift into overdrive? If its quiet and low, its not downshifting properly.

                            First, check the TV cable and the tv cable grommet, these are the two most common problems with our cars. Please replace the tv cable grommet if its old, worn or broken, otherwise it will kill your tranny. The check the settings for the TV cable, there is a thread here about adjusting it. If your not sure how to do it, a good tranny shop should be able to do it without any problems, its pretty easy.

                            Check for vacuum leaks and scan for codes, a failed sensor or a vacuum leak will cause a big power loss in these cars. If you haven't done a basic tune-up, your car won't have enough power also. I have 3:27's in my car, which are decent performance/towing gears and my car struggled up hills until I tuned the car up. A TPS sensor thats not set properly will cause this type of problem too, it should be set at .98 to .99 volts.

                            If its not any of the problems listed above and the car runs fine (not throwing any codes), you probably need better gears. These cars use a very common and popular 8.8 inch rear, so you don't need to swap out an entire rear-end for better gearing. Get a track-lock differential if you don't have one and a rebuild kit, unless you take it to a shop to do it. I like the 3:27's in my car, it moves great with them and still gets great gas mileage. My car came stock with them (Axle code 5 ), and I don't have a problem getting up hills with them.

                            3:55's are a great upgrade for better performance and are great for tow-package cars. Might loose 1-2mpg on the highway but your in town mileage will increase alot, not to mention you won't need to floor it up hills.
                            Current rides - 1991 Ford Thunderbird 3.8 v6 (gas saver/DD) - New Heads/Headgaskets with ARP studs, Air Silencer Delete, 70mm MAF, Plasti-dipped Matte Black with a Silver Metalflake Overlay, Muffler Delete, some LED's, 30.233 MPG for high MPG average!
                            2006 Jeep Wrangler 4WD (fun vehicle/backup DD) - 4.0/6spd - too many mods to list.

                            Associated Panthers:
                            Father's 1994 Ford Crown Victoria - Stock, 45,000 miles.
                            Sold in 2007 - 1987 Mercury Grand Marquis LS "Grandpa Special" 2 door.
                            http://www.cardomain.com/ride/2128327

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                              #15
                              hey scott bowman do you drive on 70 coming from hagerstown toward frederick that 1st hill a bitch

                              1989 mercury grand marquis gs / 2014 ford focus s daily driver
                              302 lopo with ho upper/ aod with trans go shift kit
                              k code 3:55 posi rear/big brake swap tow package car

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