🚨 1996 Ford Crown Victoria: Emergency Neutral
The 1996 Crown Victoria uses a traditional column-mounted shifter with mechanical shift-lock interlock.
🧰 Drafted with AI under the editorial review of Chris Hackleman & Jeff Moore — cross-check against your owner’s manual when possible.
⚠️ Chock the wheels first — neutral means the car can roll. Set the parking brake while you work, never stand downhill of the vehicle, and try a 12-volt jump before any override: power fixes most stuck-in-park problems instantly.
The procedure
- Ensure the parking brake is fully engaged and the vehicle is on level ground or properly chocked.
- Turn the ignition key to the ACC or ON position if battery has any power remaining.
- Locate the shift-lock override slot: it is a small rectangular slot in the column shroud, typically on the right side of the steering column near the base of the shifter lever.
- Remove the small plastic cover over the override slot (it may pop out or slide off).
- Insert a small flat-blade screwdriver or similar tool into the override slot and press down/inward firmly.
- While holding the override pressed, press the shifter release button and move the shifter to Neutral.
- If the vehicle has absolutely no electrical power and the override does not function, the steering column shroud must be partially removed to access the mechanical shift-lock linkage directly—this requires removing screws from the upper and lower column covers.
Shift-lock override location
Small rectangular slot on the right side of the steering column shroud near the shifter base, covered by a plastic cap
With zero electrical power
With zero 12V power, the standard override may not work. You will need to remove the upper and lower steering column shroud covers (typically 2-4 Phillips screws) to access the shift-lock solenoid mechanism. Manually press or pull the shift-lock lever to release the shifter, then move to Neutral. This is an under-dash procedure requiring basic tools.