Mar-01-2012 05:53 AM
Mar-01-2012 01:09 PM
ricatic wrote:
I have to laugh when the very documentation provided by Bosch and Ford is summarily dismissed by the fan boys on the Ford sites.
Mar-01-2012 12:50 PM
That should be a red flag in front of a bull to never let biodiesel near your 6.7 if at all possible.
Mar-01-2012 12:47 PM
NewsW wrote:
From the Ford Report:The diesel fuel properties that Ford considers regarding HPFP performance and durability are lubricity, viscosity, water content, total acid number, and oxidation stability.....
Additionally... biodiesel content is another property that Ford considers with regard to HPFP performance and durability. Biodiesel typically provides favorable lubricity properties; however, the fatty-acid methyl esters (FAME) of biodiesel can reduce the stability of the finished blend and oxidize easily, compared with petroleum diesel fuel. If biodiesel is permitted to oxidize, it produces reaction products (acids and peroxides) that can damage or degrade components.
That should be a red flag in front of a bull to never let biodiesel near your 6.7 if at all possible.
Mar-01-2012 12:37 PM
The diesel fuel properties that Ford considers regarding HPFP performance and durability are lubricity, viscosity, water content, total acid number, and oxidation stability.....
Additionally... biodiesel content is another property that Ford considers with regard to HPFP performance and durability. Biodiesel typically provides favorable lubricity properties; however, the fatty-acid methyl esters (FAME) of biodiesel can reduce the stability of the finished blend and oxidize easily, compared with petroleum diesel fuel. If biodiesel is permitted to oxidize, it produces reaction products (acids and peroxides) that can damage or degrade components.
Mar-01-2012 12:18 PM
gmcsmoke wrote:NewsW wrote:gmcsmoke wrote:
You my friend need to wake up from the dream world you're living in. Because there's no way in BP or Exxon is going to pay a $12k repair bill because you claim "bad fuel".
My experience with major brands is, upon presentation of solid evidence, paid promptly.
FYI, I have also been paid promptly by major suppliers (e.g. Allied-Signal) when solid evidence of failure of their component was presented to them.
They were all more than fair.
Example of a solid "bad fuel" claim.
Tank nearly empty, XYZ pulls up to ABC Major Brand Diesel Station.
Engine, everything running fine.
Fills up with full tank of ABC Major Brand Diesel.
Engine starts, coughs, then dies, WIF light comes on.
Immediately towed to dealer, who discover 10+ gallons of water in fuel tank.
Contacted ABC Major Brand Corporate immediately.
(In background, ABC halts sale of suspect fuel from that pump, then sends out tech to check, and alas, find tank half full of water).
ABC Major Brands gulps...
And Pay.
What also helps:
No previous claims history (or similar claims).
No lawyer involved.
No claims for damages, etc.
Limited out of pocket claim (just the frigging bill, not padded).
No nonsense.
Ford claimed water is Ric's fuel...Did BP or Exxon pay the $12k for the repair?
Mar-01-2012 12:17 PM
gmcsmoke wrote:
Ford claimed water is Ric's fuel...Did BP or Exxon pay the $12k for the repair?
Mar-01-2012 12:12 PM
NewsW wrote:gmcsmoke wrote:
You my friend need to wake up from the dream world you're living in. Because there's no way in BP or Exxon is going to pay a $12k repair bill because you claim "bad fuel".
My experience with major brands is, upon presentation of solid evidence, paid promptly.
FYI, I have also been paid promptly by major suppliers (e.g. Allied-Signal) when solid evidence of failure of their component was presented to them.
They were all more than fair.
Example of a solid "bad fuel" claim.
Tank nearly empty, XYZ pulls up to ABC Major Brand Diesel Station.
Engine, everything running fine.
Fills up with full tank of ABC Major Brand Diesel.
Engine starts, coughs, then dies, WIF light comes on.
Immediately towed to dealer, who discover 10+ gallons of water in fuel tank.
Contacted ABC Major Brand Corporate immediately.
(In background, ABC halts sale of suspect fuel from that pump, then sends out tech to check, and alas, find tank half full of water).
ABC Major Brands gulps...
And Pay.
What also helps:
No previous claims history (or similar claims).
No lawyer involved.
No claims for damages, etc.
Limited out of pocket claim (just the frigging bill, not padded).
No nonsense.
Mar-01-2012 12:09 PM
kmfvfr wrote:
So let me get this straight...on the very FIRST page of the document Ford has the wrong date???? At least it looks like that to me...I wonder if Ford can get anything right..........
Mar-01-2012 11:57 AM
Mar-01-2012 11:27 AM
Mar-01-2012 11:19 AM
Mar-01-2012 11:11 AM
BenK wrote:
NewsW
Totally agree that automotive is one of the toughest nuts and then factor in
the idiot and gorilla (both user and advisers) out there who WILL use
it wrong and/or break it to then blame the OEM
BGA's are okay with just solder, but it is not in a high vibration
environment...the carrier takes that away, but for open contacts of
a switch, even with a designed in wipe, hard gold is the only way for me
Mar-01-2012 11:03 AM
ricatic wrote:Powerdude wrote:
Wow.
I dunno about you, but I like to understand how stuff works, before doing anything with it.
Did you link this to FTE too?
This has been posted at FTE more than once. It precipitated a hot discussion that required banning those that felt Ford was handling the issue poorly...you know... the Shame on Ford guy's.
to goducks, the "dead horse guy",
Why do you look upon the providing of requested information in that way? Is not the expansion of knowledge why this forum is so successful? I would say the failing of Ford to support their decision to use the Bosch CP4.2 HPFP in their 6.7 diesel engine and the subsequent discussion is far from dead...it has only just started. There are more failures, with the standard Ford warranty denial, happening weekly.
The insurance company's are not going to keep taking it on the chin. When that happens, owners are going start to fight back. Ford has been lucky to date that the majority of the owners have accepted the failure as water induced, found out that insurance will cover the damage and breathed a sigh of relief that it " whew, that only cost me my deductible". When the $10,000 to $12,000 repair bills begin to be denied by the insurance company's, the stuff will hit the fan.
Is this discussion relevant...you bet it is
Regards
Mar-01-2012 10:57 AM
Mar-01-2012 10:50 AM