TL;DR:
1998 Jeep Wrangler 4.0L automatic was stumbling. Tried spark plugs, wires, coil, distributor, CPS, O2 sensor, vacuum checks, throttle body, IAC, injectors, PCM—nothing worked.
Final fix: replaced distributor and used the original Cam Position Sensor from the old distributor. Jeep runs perfectly now.
After months of frustration, I finally resolved a stumble/surging problem on my 1998 Jeep Wrangler 4.0L automatic. Since I didn’t see this documented anywhere, I wanted to share my experience and what ultimately fixed it. Disclaimer: I’m by no means a “car guy,” but I consider myself an avid DIYer. I really enjoyed getting hands-on with the engine and figuring this out. Part of the reason that I bought this jeep was to get some hands-on experience with a car. Happy to be a part of the club now!
Symptoms:
1998 Jeep Wrangler 4.0L automatic was stumbling. Tried spark plugs, wires, coil, distributor, CPS, O2 sensor, vacuum checks, throttle body, IAC, injectors, PCM—nothing worked.
Final fix: replaced distributor and used the original Cam Position Sensor from the old distributor. Jeep runs perfectly now.
After months of frustration, I finally resolved a stumble/surging problem on my 1998 Jeep Wrangler 4.0L automatic. Since I didn’t see this documented anywhere, I wanted to share my experience and what ultimately fixed it. Disclaimer: I’m by no means a “car guy,” but I consider myself an avid DIYer. I really enjoyed getting hands-on with the engine and figuring this out. Part of the reason that I bought this jeep was to get some hands-on experience with a car. Happy to be a part of the club now!
Symptoms:
- Jeep stumbled especially while driving, sometimes at idle. Started slow and got worse over a few weeks. Occasionally stalling due to the misfires.
- Rough idling; occasional stalls.
- Restarting temporarily “fixed” it.
- Inconsistent CEL codes: CPS codes, O2 codes, ASD/fuel pump relay codes.
- Spark plugs, wires, distributor cap & rotor, ignition coil – standard tune-up. Did not fix the stumble.
- Crankshaft Position Sensor (CPS) – replaced multiple times with NGK; misaligned CPS made Jeep run worse temporarily. (CPS was installed as high up as possible, versus flush. Yes I had the paper spacer on it, didnt seem to make a difference)
- O2 Sensor Replacement – no effect.
- Vacuum Leak Check – found throttle body leak; replaced throttle body.
- IAC Valve Cleaning – no effect.
- Big 7-WireKit – checked for grounding issues; no effect. (Bought this after checking grounds, even though they all checked out)
- Alternator (replaced this due to a very infrequent odd multimeter reading, figured at 170K miles, it might be time to just do it anyways).
- PCM Sent Out for Testing – PCM checked out fine; returned.
- Fuel Injectors – replaced all; cylinder 3 slightly under ohmed. Fuel pressure fine.
- Water Pump, Thermostat Housing, Thermostat – replaced while working in the engine because of leaks.
- Mechanic friend suggested removing the distributor.
- Distributor shaft had abnormal play → rotor skipped over cap contacts → Jeep stumbled.
- Replaced distributor (Extreme Terrain). Jeep ran better but still stumbled above ~2,000 RPM.
- New distributor had an aftermarket Cam Position Sensor (CMP).
- Swapped in CMP from original distributor.
- Jeep now runs perfectly under all conditions—smooth idling, no stumbling, no surging.
- Critical timing components (distributor + CMP) may fail mechanically or be sensitive to aftermarket parts.
- Stumbles/surging can point to mechanical issues in the distributor shaft, not just sensors or wiring.
- Sometimes OEM/original sensors are more reliable for Wranglers than aftermarket replacements.
