โFeb-02-2014 12:40 PM
โFeb-04-2014 12:34 PM
Seattle Lion wrote:Rest easy! Other than some (very few, like 0.01%) reported high pressure fuel pumps grenading that Ford would not cover under warranty, the 6.7 seems to be a solid motor.
How about the Ford 6.7. We just bought a new F350. Reading the 6.0 horror stories worries me about the new engine. I don't mean to hijack the thread.
โFeb-04-2014 11:40 AM
โFeb-04-2014 11:24 AM
โFeb-04-2014 09:11 AM
Scott W wrote:
I guess I have one of the good 6.0 Fords. Maintenance is the key to any vehicle.
โFeb-04-2014 04:59 AM
โFeb-03-2014 05:19 PM
โFeb-03-2014 05:13 PM
โFeb-03-2014 03:52 PM
โFeb-03-2014 03:35 PM
โFeb-03-2014 10:22 AM
rhagfo wrote:transamz9 wrote:Jerem0621 wrote:
5.9 let my dad down and it required a tow. Hard to run the Cummins when the lift pump fails. He still has it and is well over 200k miles now.
Not throwing stones at the Cummins, just pointing out that ALL diesel options can and do have failure points.
Some Duramax trucks have head gasket and injector issues, some Rams have Lift pump issues,... Then there is the 6.0.
This is not a motor that you treat like every other motor. You need to carefully monitor engine oil and engine coolant temps, watch for tell tell signs of failure and get it repaired. Change the coolant often and keep a close eye on things. Many 6.0's live happy lives without failure.
IMHO before I bought a 6.0 diesel I would invest in a scan guage II and plug it into the truck on the test drive. Let the truck tell you the story.
The lift pump on your dads 5.9 likely failed long before the truck left him stranded. The CP will still pull the fuel to itself and not miss a beat.
He could have put a cheap low pressure fuel gauge in it and would have caught the problem and still drove it home. The 6.0, most of the time when something acts up, you better find a good place to pull over.
Between the two Dmax for sure, I changed from Ford to Ram after 45 years of Ford!! I could not bring myself to buy a 6.0.
I have had my Ram for almost four years, added a small chip and tow 11,000# 5er, turned 268,000 miles last week, still a solid truck. Bought it used from a dealer (Ram) one owner with only 234,000 miles. Truck body and interior were in showroom shape, the Cummins ran great clean and strong.
The Ford 6.0 to bullet proof, is about $5,000+, but if you chose not to to repair/replace a blown 6.0 is about $15,000, why do you think so many on this forum are dislike diesels, they likely had a bad 6.0!
โFeb-03-2014 07:34 AM
โFeb-03-2014 07:29 AM
transamz9 wrote:Jerem0621 wrote:
5.9 let my dad down and it required a tow. Hard to run the Cummins when the lift pump fails. He still has it and is well over 200k miles now.
Not throwing stones at the Cummins, just pointing out that ALL diesel options can and do have failure points.
Some Duramax trucks have head gasket and injector issues, some Rams have Lift pump issues,... Then there is the 6.0.
This is not a motor that you treat like every other motor. You need to carefully monitor engine oil and engine coolant temps, watch for tell tell signs of failure and get it repaired. Change the coolant often and keep a close eye on things. Many 6.0's live happy lives without failure.
IMHO before I bought a 6.0 diesel I would invest in a scan guage II and plug it into the truck on the test drive. Let the truck tell you the story.
The lift pump on your dads 5.9 likely failed long before the truck left him stranded. The CP will still pull the fuel to itself and not miss a beat.
He could have put a cheap low pressure fuel gauge in it and would have caught the problem and still drove it home. The 6.0, most of the time when something acts up, you better find a good place to pull over.
โFeb-03-2014 07:28 AM
โFeb-03-2014 06:55 AM
โFeb-03-2014 06:23 AM