P300E

P300E Ford engine fault code diagnosis, code meaning,symptoms and how to fix it.

P300E Diagnosis

The fuse in the main PDM powering this circuit may be open. The root cause could be excessive loads on an output, or a short to ground in the VBAT2 supply to the CHM.The BHM supplies battery power on this circuit when the key is in the RUN or CRANK positions. Troubleshoot for a wiring fault shorting this circuit to ground or for too many optional circuits spliced into it that is causing the BHM to turn it off.

The suspension proportioning output circuit is commanded OFF, but air pressure is detected at the pressure feedback switch. Troubleshoot for suspension proportioning air solenoid fault, and for air pressure switch short circuit fault.

Ford P300E Fault Code Meaning :

Ford P300E Symptoms :

Ford P300E Reasons :

How To Fix Ford P300E Trouble Code ?

Which Ford cars have the code P300E?

  • P300E Ford Aerostar
  • P300E Ford Bronco
  • P300E Ford C-Max
  • P300E Ford C-Max Energi
  • P300E Ford C-Max Hybrid
  • P300E Ford Contour
  • P300E Ford Crown Victoria
  • P300E Ford EcoSport
  • P300E Ford Econoline
  • P300E Ford Edge
  • P300E Ford Escape
  • P300E Ford Escape Hybrid
  • P300E Ford Escort
  • P300E Ford Everest
  • P300E Ford Excursion
  • P300E Ford Expedition
  • P300E Ford Explorer
  • P300E Ford Explorer Sport Trac
  • P300E Ford F-150
  • P300E Ford F-250
  • P300E Ford F-350
  • P300E Ford Fiesta
  • P300E Ford Flex
  • P300E Ford Focus
  • P300E Ford Focus Electric
  • P300E Ford Freestar
  • P300E Ford Freestyle
  • P300E Ford Fusion
  • P300E Ford Fusion Energi
  • P300E Ford Fusion Hybrid
  • P300E Ford Fusion Plug-In Hybrid
  • P300E Ford GT
  • P300E Ford Mustang
  • P300E Ford Mustang Mach-E
  • P300E Ford Mystique
  • P300E Ford Probe
  • P300E Ford Ranger
  • P300E Ford Taurus
  • P300E Ford Taurus X
  • P300E Ford Tempo
  • P300E Ford Thunderbird
  • P300E Ford Transit
  • P300E Ford Transit Connect
  • P300E Ford Windstar

A code is a fault code and it indicates that something has gone wrong with your car's engine.

It can be caused by many different problems, including a faulty battery, a bad fuel pump, or even a cracked exhaust manifold.

You will need to diagnose the problem before you can fix it. The best way to do this is with an OBD scanner tool.

A scan tool will tell you what needs fixing and how much it will cost in order to fix that particular issue.