Forum Discussion
- jimh406Explorer IIII’ve thought about this a bit. I have a 2006 Ford “Exploder”. That’s just a nickname from other people. We’ve had good luck with it. It’s not my only vehicle, but we’ve put almost 100K on it and bought it with 100K on it. It’s mostly highway miles. I had time to search and bought it for 11,500 several years ago. Yes, I could have bought a new one. By now, I would have lost around 30K on that purchase if I had bought new.
If you are hard on vehicles, I think you should avoid long term ownership. We aren’t. We did have one annoying problem lately. It kept blowing horn fuses. It was about $25 for the parts and a few hours for me to take fender well apart.. I bought brakes online and had a local shop do front and rear at the same time. That was $400. We’ve had to replace the bolts/exhaust manifolds that was about 1000, but that happens on pretty new vehicles.
The body is still in great shape. The drive train is in great shape. It doesn’t use oil. My old mechanic said he had several of the same engines in Limos that went to over 500K miles.
My point is it depends. It is work to find a “great” deal of a one/two owner, but possible. It’s also possible to run an older vehicle for years with pennies compared to dollars. Whatever makes you happy since you will be paying for it ... not me. If you like the old vehicle and everything seems to work pretty well I don’t see a problem with replacing the engine once it is worn out. However, very few motors are completely destroyed inside, so maybe some TLC by a good mechanic could save some money.
Have fun. - mr_andyjExplorerAnother used f150 same price as a new/rebuilt trans, but the used truck will also have a used trans that is a lot closer to going bad than a new or rebuilt trans. Might be safer to get a new trans in your old truck as you know what issues your truck has not related to the trans. If you will be using TC then a strong trans will be more important than just for a DD.
If it is motor issues then you still have to think about the trans in your current truck (if trans is good and just motor is bad) which will go bad eventually.
If you tow or Tc or RV then blowing up transmissions is just a risk of the game, so plan for it. - Buzzcut1Nomad IIwe did it on a work vehicle. had 300k on the motor. choice was 3500 for a new engine or buy a another vehicle. we chose the new motor which now has 130,000 miles on it. That allowed us to buy another new work vehicle a few months down the line.
- JRscoobyExplorer II
Kayteg1 wrote:
I am old enough to remember the times where you could send engine block for honing, get new, bigger pistons and rings, then send the heads for valve repolishing.
But the engine repair shop I remember from over 10 years ago was converted to ... Pet Hotel.
The trade seems to vanish.
Yes, I remember when a car/pickup got close to 100,000 miles we would look at all the front end parts, and rust on the body. If good, pull and rebuild engine. Or if thought rest of car was good for another 50,000 shop for used motor with less than 50 on it. But now, with the engine life over 200,000 much fewer rebuilds.
Also, back then it was much cheaper to rebuild/replace the transmission. AC died? Open the window.
In late 2004 when I faced this issue with '85 F150 that had been in the family from new, I called BIL that owned a transmission shop with good rep. Rebuilds on that are running about same as the long block. - ppineExplorer IIIf you spend the money and buy a diesel you don't have to this conversation.
- klyrossExplorermidnightsadie - why, because a better warranty?
time2roll - but, I do not want to get stuck in the boonies at 9:00pm - and 320,000 miles is a lot, no? - I would give the old dog a bit more patience and let it run as is. Start putting away $500+ a month toward a newer truck. You should be able to pick up a 2022 model in 2026 for a decent price and have a good down payment by then.
- midnightsadieExplorer III,d only do it if it was a crate motor.
- klyrossExplorerAlways the issue of when to stop repairs - yep.
Does not appear to be burning oil and the mileage never was very good, but, probably 1-2 mpg. worse now. If rebuild, heater core and performance upgrades could certainly be on the table. kohldad - we have a 2005 Lance 815 and I am coveting your 6.4 Hemi. - Kayteg1Explorer III recall our youtube member replacing engine on his truck lately.
Crated rebuilds seem to be the best deal. ... if you like your present truck.
I am old enough to remember the times where you could send engine block for honing, get new, bigger pistons and rings, then send the heads for valve repolishing.
But the engine repair shop I remember from over 10 years ago was converted to ... Pet Hotel.
The trade seems to vanish.
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