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P0714: Transmission Fluid Temperature Sensor A Circuit Intermittent

Severity
High
NHTSA Reports
1
Vehicles Affected
1
System
Powertrain

What Does P0714 Mean?

P0714 is a diagnostic trouble code indicating: Transmission Fluid Temperature Sensor A Circuit Intermittent. This code relates to the transmission system. It has been reported in NHTSA complaints across 1 different vehicle models.

The automatic transmission is controlled by the TCM using input from speed sensors, temperature sensors, and pressure sensors. When the TCM detects a fault, it may activate limp mode (2nd or 3rd gear only). Shift solenoids are electromagnetic valves inside the valve body controlling hydraulic fluid flow. Modern transmissions use 4-8 solenoids in combination for each gear. Solenoid failures are often caused by contaminated fluid β€” worn clutch material and degraded fluid create varnish that sticks solenoids. Always check transmission fluid first: level, color (red/pink good, brown/black bad), and smell (burnt = internal damage). Transmission DTCs escalate fast β€” a $200 solenoid fix can become a $3000-$5000 rebuild if ignored.

Symptoms of P0714

Common Causes

Real Owner Reports

From NHTSA complaint database β€” actual owner descriptions.

"THE VEHICLE WHILE OPERATING UNDER NORMAL DRIVING CONDITIONS HAD A CHECK ENGINE LIGHT APPEAR. A CERTIFIED MECHANIC FOUND THE TCM WAS FAULTY. FINDINGS: P0218 HIGH TEMP OPERATION ACTIVATED. P0714 TRANSMISSION TEMP SENSOR INTERMITTENT. P0613 INTERNAL TCM PROBLEM. INSTRUMENT CLUSTER: 1 TCM/SINGLE "

β€” Jeep Wrangler owner, 08/22/2020

Source: NHTSA Complaints Database

Most Reported Vehicles for P0714

Based on NHTSA owner complaint data.

# Vehicle Reports
1 JEEP WRANGLER

Diagnostic Tips

  1. Check fluid level and condition FIRST
  2. Multiple codes suggest valve body or internal damage
  3. Monitor solenoid duty cycle with scan tool
  4. Solenoids often accessible by removing pan

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a shift solenoid?
Electromagnetic valve controlling hydraulic fluid flow for gear selection. Modern transmissions have 4-8 solenoids.
Can I drive in limp mode?
Only to a repair facility. Limp mode prevents damage but causes excessive heat with extended use.
How much for solenoid replacement?
Individual: $15-$100 parts. Packs: $50-$300. Labor: $150-$400. Total: $200-$700.
Can fluid change fix it?
Sometimes. If solenoid sticks from contaminated fluid, fresh manufacturer fluid resolves ~30-40% of cases.

What To Do Next

Possible Fixes

  • πŸ”§ Replace shift solenoid or pack
  • πŸ”§ Transmission fluid flush with manufacturer fluid
  • πŸ”§ Repair wiring to transmission
  • πŸ”§ Replace valve body
  1. 1
    Find your vehicle above

    Click your make and model for real owner reports and common causes specific to your vehicle.

  2. 2
    Check for recalls

    Go to nhtsa.gov/recalls and enter your VIN. Free repairs if covered.

  3. 3
    Get a professional diagnosis

    A code alone doesn't identify the exact failed part. A diagnostic ($50–$150) pinpoints the root cause.

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