Forum Discussion
- LantleyNomad
Procrastinator wrote:
I am going to chime in here. I own a 6.0, yes I knew about all of its flaws before I bought it. I have owned multiple Cummins, a V10, a 7.3, and now a 6.0. I have driven a lot of miles in all of them.
My advice is simple. If you come to an online forum for diesel advice a 6.0 is not for you. I turn my own wrenches and I have a large tool box. I don't mind doing preventative maintenance. There is a video or forum for every 6.0 ailment out there. When I upgraded trailers I wanted a dually again. I got a very good deal on 6.0 because of all the fears of it. Like, about $12,000 savings compared to other trucks. I constantly monitor my engine with Torque Pro. The truck's brakes and transmission have given me more problems than the motor. Good luck in what you choose and remember the internet NEVER lies.
Well said - ProcrastinatorExplorerI am going to chime in here. I own a 6.0, yes I knew about all of its flaws before I bought it. I have owned multiple Cummins, a V10, a 7.3, and now a 6.0. I have driven a lot of miles in all of them.
My advice is simple. If you come to an online forum for diesel advice a 6.0 is not for you. I turn my own wrenches and I have a large tool box. I don't mind doing preventative maintenance. There is a video or forum for every 6.0 ailment out there. When I upgraded trailers I wanted a dually again. I got a very good deal on 6.0 because of all the fears of it. Like, about $12,000 savings compared to other trucks. I constantly monitor my engine with Torque Pro. The truck's brakes and transmission have given me more problems than the motor. Good luck in what you choose and remember the internet NEVER lies. - wnjjExplorer II
Turtle n Peeps wrote:
My experience with the 5.7 diesel has been nothing but good. They must be a great engine! Just posting my experience with the Olds diesel! :R
Some of you crack me up. :B
X2
Anecdotes, in either direction, do not change statistics and probabilities.
My definition of a terrible engine is one that has a much higher failure rate than its peers and not one that simply has many that don’t fail. - Turtle_n_PeepsExplorerMy experience with the 5.7 diesel has been nothing but good. They must be a great engine! Just posting my experience with the Olds diesel! :R
Some of you crack me up. :B - blofgrenExplorer
Lantley wrote:
jerem0621 wrote:
ksss wrote:
Edd505 wrote:
Find a low mileage 6.0 diesel, do the EGR delete and drive on. Towing 12K at 214K and still running strong.
Wow! There is some advice to flush. When two companies spend hundreds of millions to point fingers on who is responsible for the creation of likely the worst diesel engine to roll out of Detroit since the GM 5.7 diesel and when companies exist for the sole purpose of trying to "bullet proof" said diesel. That is called a clue. If you bought a new early 6.0 (and we did on the farm, after the very good 6.9 and 7.3 engines) shame on Ford. You buy one now, shame on you.
That kind of talk is out dated now. There are no warranty claims going on for the 6.0 PSD now...the newest 6.0 is now 12 model years old. The manufacturers have moved well beyond the handling of this motor. Yet, every single day there they are...working and running. The issues and the motor are well understood now and they are not that big of a deal.
Matter of fact they don’t have near the emissions junk the new ones have so many people are keeping them or acquiring them. Makes sense from a financial POV.
Thanks!
Jeremiah
The 6.0 is still to be avoided.Unlike a fine wine the 6.0 did not get better with age. There are other options without the sordid history that did not/do not require bullet proofing
X2. And this is coming from a former 6.0L owner. - CampinghossExplorer IIYes I agree with others, I am not pushing anyone to get any particular kind of truck or engine. I am only speaking to what I know for sure since I had one. What I do know is I will still be driving mine if it had not been marginal in towing capacities. I do get tired of reading post when folks bash not only 6.0's but any when they are only going on heresay or what they read. Heck, if I believed everything I read I would not have purchased a new RV knowing it would fall apart on the trip home.
- mosseaterExplorer IIThe 5.4 L is a good engine, but underpowered for pulling 8k trailers. With a 6 speed trans it would be better. The spark plug issue is a real problem if they're not changed when you buy it. My dealer quoted me over $1000 before any break, and each broken one is another $100, so I decided to do it myself. It wasn't hard or expensive. Just tedious and uncomfortable. Spent the better part of 10 hours under the hood bent over, broke 4. The Lisle tool worked great, like $60, and plugs were only $9 a piece. But a lot of work for a poor design. I like the engine, it really loves to spin up, but that's where you'll be trying to pull anything up a hill, 4-5K RPM. Smaller trailers would be fine.
- rowekmrExplorerI wasn't defending the 6.0L just a poster right to post something actual without it being called silly. You can agree or disagree, I took neither side.
Lantley wrote:
rowekmr wrote:
Nothing silly about someone sharing their actual experience (vs hearsay) and what they think of a drivetrain. Leave it up to the OP to decide.Grit dog wrote:
jerem0621 wrote:
ksss wrote:
Edd505 wrote:
Find a low mileage 6.0 diesel, do the EGR delete and drive on. Towing 12K at 214K and still running strong.
Wow! There is some advice to flush. When two companies spend hundreds of millions to point fingers on who is responsible for the creation of likely the worst diesel engine to roll out of Detroit since the GM 5.7 diesel and when companies exist for the sole purpose of trying to "bullet proof" said diesel. That is called a clue. If you bought a new early 6.0 (and we did on the farm, after the very good 6.9 and 7.3 engines) shame on Ford. You buy one now, shame on you.
That kind of talk is out dated now. There are no warranty claims going on for the 6.0 PSD now...the newest 6.0 is now 12 model years old. The manufacturers have moved well beyond the handling of this motor. Yet, every single day there they are...working and running. The issues and the motor are well understood now and they are not that big of a deal.
Matter of fact they don’t have near the emissions junk the new ones have so many people are keeping them or acquiring them. Makes sense from a financial POV.
Thanks!
Jeremiah
Not that big of a deal if you have the knowledge and $ to keep it running......
Defending the virtues of the 6.0 is like peeing your pants in public. You may get a warm feeling from it but you’ll look silly to everyone else!
There’s a reason, in this good economy, that Id have to give 20grand for any halfway decent older diesel and at least 10 for high mile good ones. But I could have my pick of comparable 6.0s for close to half that price.
Calling the history of the 6.0 Hearsay is a bit of an understatement.
Did you read the title of the thread? If the 6.0 should not be avoided no F-250 engine should be avoided!
Pretending the 6.0 is just another engine that may require a little tinkering is very misleading. - LantleyNomad
rowekmr wrote:
Nothing silly about someone sharing their actual experience (vs hearsay) and what they think of a drivetrain. Leave it up to the OP to decide.Grit dog wrote:
jerem0621 wrote:
ksss wrote:
Edd505 wrote:
Find a low mileage 6.0 diesel, do the EGR delete and drive on. Towing 12K at 214K and still running strong.
Wow! There is some advice to flush. When two companies spend hundreds of millions to point fingers on who is responsible for the creation of likely the worst diesel engine to roll out of Detroit since the GM 5.7 diesel and when companies exist for the sole purpose of trying to "bullet proof" said diesel. That is called a clue. If you bought a new early 6.0 (and we did on the farm, after the very good 6.9 and 7.3 engines) shame on Ford. You buy one now, shame on you.
That kind of talk is out dated now. There are no warranty claims going on for the 6.0 PSD now...the newest 6.0 is now 12 model years old. The manufacturers have moved well beyond the handling of this motor. Yet, every single day there they are...working and running. The issues and the motor are well understood now and they are not that big of a deal.
Matter of fact they don’t have near the emissions junk the new ones have so many people are keeping them or acquiring them. Makes sense from a financial POV.
Thanks!
Jeremiah
Not that big of a deal if you have the knowledge and $ to keep it running......
Defending the virtues of the 6.0 is like peeing your pants in public. You may get a warm feeling from it but you’ll look silly to everyone else!
There’s a reason, in this good economy, that Id have to give 20grand for any halfway decent older diesel and at least 10 for high mile good ones. But I could have my pick of comparable 6.0s for close to half that price.
Calling the history of the 6.0 Hearsay is a bit of an understatement.
Did you read the title of the thread? If the 6.0 should not be avoided no F-250 engine should be avoided!
Pretending the 6.0 is just another engine that may require a little tinkering is very misleading. - rowekmrExplorerNothing silly about someone sharing their actual experience (vs hearsay) and what they think of a drivetrain. Leave it up to the OP to decide.
Grit dog wrote:
jerem0621 wrote:
ksss wrote:
Edd505 wrote:
Find a low mileage 6.0 diesel, do the EGR delete and drive on. Towing 12K at 214K and still running strong.
Wow! There is some advice to flush. When two companies spend hundreds of millions to point fingers on who is responsible for the creation of likely the worst diesel engine to roll out of Detroit since the GM 5.7 diesel and when companies exist for the sole purpose of trying to "bullet proof" said diesel. That is called a clue. If you bought a new early 6.0 (and we did on the farm, after the very good 6.9 and 7.3 engines) shame on Ford. You buy one now, shame on you.
That kind of talk is out dated now. There are no warranty claims going on for the 6.0 PSD now...the newest 6.0 is now 12 model years old. The manufacturers have moved well beyond the handling of this motor. Yet, every single day there they are...working and running. The issues and the motor are well understood now and they are not that big of a deal.
Matter of fact they don’t have near the emissions junk the new ones have so many people are keeping them or acquiring them. Makes sense from a financial POV.
Thanks!
Jeremiah
Not that big of a deal if you have the knowledge and $ to keep it running......
Defending the virtues of the 6.0 is like peeing your pants in public. You may get a warm feeling from it but you’ll look silly to everyone else!
There’s a reason, in this good economy, that Id have to give 20grand for any halfway decent older diesel and at least 10 for high mile good ones. But I could have my pick of comparable 6.0s for close to half that price.
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