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Ford V10 gradual reduction in fuel economy

whemme
Explorer II
Explorer II
I have a 26' Class C on a 2000 Ford E450 chassis with V10 engine now with 115,000 mile on it. I used to average 8.5 mpg pulling a 3400 lb toad but over time the economy has deteriated to the 7.5 to 8.0 mpg range. My Ford dealer says that as long as I am not getting any check engine codes that my oxygen sensors are still OK and not causing the reduced mpg problem. But I still wonder if the oxygen sensors might be causing the problem. Anyone else with experience with this issue?
2002 Born Free 26' RSB Motorcoach
2005 Chevrolet Malibu LS Toad
16 REPLIES 16

whemme
Explorer II
Explorer II
My V10 at 115,000 miles used only about 1 qt oil in 4000 miles.
2002 Born Free 26' RSB Motorcoach
2005 Chevrolet Malibu LS Toad

Chum_lee
Explorer
Explorer
"My Ford dealer says that as long as I am not getting any check engine codes that my oxygen sensors are still OK and not causing the reduced mpg problem."

Yep, that's what they will tell ya! If there aren't any fault codes, many of the "technicians" of today are literally . . . . . lost.

At 115,000 miles, is your engine using any oil? Say, . . . . more than a quart every 750 miles. If you can't find anything else, it might be worth checking to see if your catalytic converter is getting plugged up. When cold, hit it with your hand and listen for rattles. (broken honeycomb substrate) If no, then removing it and shining a flashlight through it will tell you right away if there is a flow problem. While you are down there, check the entire exhaust system for dents, crimps, etc.

Chum lee

clayway
Explorer
Explorer
I have no idea whether this will work for you, but here in FL many stations have no alcohol fuel, mainly for the marine motors, I have been filing up using this fuel, no
more pinging & better mpg

pnichols
Explorer II
Explorer II
:h

Wow ... so nowadays we have to change several coils ever so often (which I have to hire done for $$$$) ... instead of one coil, one set of distributor points, and maybe a set of spark plug wires ever so often (which I could easily do myself for $).

I guess I understand that???????? :S

P.S. I'm not interested in hearing any reasons/excuses as to why "individual coils per plug" is some kind of advance in non-diesel fossil fuel engine technology. One can always come up with explanations as to why us common folks should have to spend more money to get by.
2005 E450 Itasca 24V Class C

whemme
Explorer II
Explorer II
Total cost at my Ford dealer to replace 10 spark plugs and coils, fuel filter, serpentine belt and oil pressure sensor was $1,776.53 back on Feb 2017 at 99,167 miles.
2002 Born Free 26' RSB Motorcoach
2005 Chevrolet Malibu LS Toad

Kamphiker
Explorer
Explorer
whemme wrote:
Yes the spark plugs and coil overs were actually replaced with new. I happen to know the Ford mechanic that did the work. Boy those coil overs are expensive - about $95 each for 10 of them!!!!


Did that include Labor ?

I recently replaced all 10 coils & Plugs on my 2006.
Genuine Motorcraft coils were $ 24.00 each. Amazon Motorcraft Coils for V10

Changing out was a PITA. I now know why Dealers charge between $ 1,000 & $ 1,200.00 to change coils & plugs.
2006 Winnebago Outlook WF324V
2009 Honda CR-V 2wd TOAD ......Campgrounds in the Smoky Mountains NP
Last Camping trip ->2011 SUMMER SMOKY MOUNTAINS NATIONAL PARK

whemme
Explorer II
Explorer II
Yes the spark plugs and coil overs were actually replaced with new. I happen to know the Ford mechanic that did the work. Boy those coil overs are expensive - about $95 each for 10 of them!!!!
2002 Born Free 26' RSB Motorcoach
2005 Chevrolet Malibu LS Toad

time2roll
Nomad
Nomad
My plugs on my 5.4 were changed at 120,000 with no change to economy, smoothness of running or power. It ran exactly the same. And yes I know the dealer actually changed them.

I also would lean on more E10 and possibly some loss of compression.

carringb
Explorer
Explorer
whemme wrote:
New spark plugs and all new coil overs were installed at 100,000 miles but that did not help the mileage problem.


Have you verified they were actually done?
2000 Ford E450 V10 VAN! 450,000+ miles
2014 ORV really big trailer
2015 Ford Focus ST

Rick_Jay
Explorer II
Explorer II
whemme,

Ok, I'll probably take some flak for this, but over the years, have you been using less "real gas" (no alcohol) and more of the E10? On all of our vehicles, the miles per gallon drops just about 10% on the E10 gas we get all over the east coast.

When we first got our motorhome, our gas stations had real gas and that's what I uased. When the E10 was mandated and I had to use that, I noticed our mpg dropped from the ranges of 8-9 mpg with real gas (depending upon whether we were towing or not) down to 7-8 mpg when we used the ethanol stuff.

I wasn't sure what had happened, but about 5 years ago when we were travelling south, I apparently filled up at a station which had real gas. Once back on the road, I immediately noticed on my dash computer the average mpg numbers began climbing to almost a full 1 mpg more! Terrain had been the same, so it wasn't a "you're going downhill" reason. The next fill up was with E10 and down came the numbers.

You've got A LOT more miles on your rig than ours (about 40,000), so it is certainly possible you're having issues due to aging components.

Just a thought.

Good Luck,

~Rick
2005 Georgie Boy Cruise Master 3625 DS on a Workhorse W-22
Rick, Gail, 1 girl (27-Angel since 2008), 1 girl (22), 2 boys (23 & 20).
2001 Honda Odyssey, Demco Aluminator tow bar & tow plate, SMI Silent Partner brake controller.

T18skyguy
Explorer
Explorer
Try cleaning the MAF sensor. Easy to do, just buy the correct spray from the auto parts store. It's easy to check the O2 sensors, they should read out a certain ohm reading on your multimeter. Youtube has a video on it I'm sure.
Retired Anesthetist. LTP. Pilot with mechanic/inspection ratings. Between rigs right now.. Wife and daughter. Four cats which we must obey.

whemme
Explorer II
Explorer II
New spark plugs and all new coil overs were installed at 100,000 miles but that did not help the mileage problem.
2002 Born Free 26' RSB Motorcoach
2005 Chevrolet Malibu LS Toad

DrewE
Explorer II
Explorer II
Have the spark plugs been replaced? If not, they're probably at (or beyond) the end of their useful life.

Oxygen sensors do age, and are relatively inexpensive and easy to replace. If they're only somewhat out of calibration they may not cause check engine lights but still affect mileage some (and possibly catalytic converter life), or so I've been led to believe. Replacing them might be a reasonable thing to try. For that matter, if the catalytic converters are getting plugged from soot or whatever, that can affect engine performance as well.

ron_dittmer
Explorer II
Explorer II
Hi whemme,

Check for this.......It is possible someone who worked on your rig made this easy mistake, causing poor fuel economy and poor performance. It is easy to check for.

Pop-off the oval air intake from above the radiator and pivot it upward. Look into the hole where it was snapped into. If you see a black plastic flap that interferes with the flow of air, you need to remove the black plastic shroud above the radiator and fold the flap back while resetting it into position.

There was a recall in 2010 on that flap. Apparently a new-bee line worker was not holding the flap back when installing the black plastic top radiator shroud. It is conceivable that an unsuspecting mechanic could make the same mistake. I almost made that mistake myself on our 2007 E350 when reinstalling the top shroud after removing a bird that died hitting and getting lodged into our front grille area.