Drivers notice a transmission that hesitates, jerks, or refuses to engage a gear. The check‑engine light flashes, and a “shift not possible” message may appear on the instrument cluster. In many cases the vehicle will stay in neutral or slip out of gear, especially during acceleration, creating a loss of power that feels like the engine is being choked. These behaviors are the hallmark of a Shift Solenoid E Electrical fault.
Because the fault is electrical, the symptoms appear only when the solenoid’s control circuit cannot command the hydraulic valve that moves gear‑selection components.
The Shift Solenoid E coil is a small electromechanical valve that opens and closes under TCM command. Over‑heating, moisture intrusion, or internal short circuits can raise the coil resistance beyond spec, preventing the valve from actuating.
The solenoid’s power and ground wires travel through the transmission tunnel and the under‑carriage. Chafing, rodent damage, or exposure to road salt can create opens or high‑resistance connections, resulting in erratic voltage at the solenoid.
Corrosion on the solenoid connector pins or loose fasteners introduces intermittent resistance. Even a few millivolts of voltage drop can cause the TCM to register a fault and set P0773.
The Transmission Control Module (TCM) supplies the 12 V reference and ground for the solenoid circuit. A failing TCM regulator, a blown fuse, or a compromised ground strap can starve the solenoid of the correct voltage, triggering the code.
Occasionally the TCM’s calibration data for Solenoid E becomes inconsistent after a transmission flash or a severe voltage spike. The module may misinterpret sensor inputs and log an electrical fault even though the hardware is sound.
Connect a professional scan tool, read the stored codes, and verify that P0773 is active. Clear the code and perform a short drive to see if it returns, confirming a persistent fault.
With the scan tool, monitor the voltage at the Shift Solenoid E circuit while cycling through gears. The specification is typically 9–12 V when the solenoid is commanded “on.” Any deviation outside this range indicates a circuit problem.
Disconnect the solenoid connector and measure coil resistance with an ohmmeter. Compare the reading to the manufacturer’s spec (usually 5–7 Ω). A higher value points to coil degradation; a very low value suggests a short.
Trace the harness from the TCM to the transmission. Look for frayed insulation, broken strands, or signs of corrosion. Repair any damaged sections with heat‑shrink tubing and proper crimp connectors.
Disconnect the solenoid plug, clean the pins with electrical contact cleaner, and reseat the connector. Verify a solid mechanical lock.
Measure voltage at the TCM’s output pin for Solenoid E while the gear selector commands the valve. Confirm a solid ground path by checking resistance to chassis ground (should be < 0.1 Ω). Replace a faulty ground strap if needed.
If voltage and wiring are sound but the code persists, reflash the TCM with the latest transmission calibration. Use the manufacturer‑approved software and follow the exact re‑programming procedure.
Install a known‑good TCM (or a bench‑tested transmission control module) in place of the suspect unit. Clear codes and test drive. If P0773 disappears, the original TCM is likely internally damaged and should be replaced.
When coil resistance is out of spec and the wiring is verified, replace the solenoid assembly. After installation, re‑clear codes, perform the live‑data voltage check, and complete a road test.
Typical costs
Service Recommendation: Most issues related to this fault are diagnosed and corrected through inspection, wiring repair, and calibration rather than module replacement. For modules not typically replaced through aftermarket suppliers, diagnosis and repair should be performed by a certified automotive technician with access to factory service information and tooling.