โAug-20-2014 03:43 PM
โAug-22-2018 08:02 PM
โAug-22-2018 06:32 PM
โAug-22-2018 04:55 PM
Veebyes wrote:
Have always run vehicles bone stock & have always gotten long service lives out of them.
My view is that the R&D people who design engines have far more resourses & much more knowledge than me. They design engines with the best combination for overall durability & performance. Get more performance, the lifespan & durability goes down. Ask anyone who races. The maintenance is constant, & expensive, to keep the performance level high. Durability & reliability goes out the window.
Use better than OEM filters. Perform OEM maintenance. Do not abuse the vehicle & it will last a long long time without major issues.
โAug-22-2018 04:51 PM
โAug-22-2018 03:54 PM
โAug-22-2018 01:55 PM
โAug-21-2014 06:57 AM
jfkmk wrote:mike mck wrote:
Give this a try. If nobody there has an answer you don't need to know it.
http://www.ford-trucks.com/forums/forum28/
Tried the link but it didn't bring me to any specific forum, so I'm not sure where you stand on the question.
One thing to remember....no tuner can give you displacement, compression or greater flow of fuel mixture. Your vehicle is already programmed to give you the optimal fuel to air ratio. A tuner can do things like change shift points and timing, but it can't change the basics you need to produce more power, at least not on any kind of appreciable level.
โAug-21-2014 06:32 AM
โAug-21-2014 04:50 AM
โAug-21-2014 02:47 AM
โAug-21-2014 01:39 AM
โAug-20-2014 08:02 PM
โAug-20-2014 07:54 PM
TXiceman wrote:
Tuners may make a small difference in performance. The larger gains are from intake and exhaust improvements. Also, just about any increase in power comes at the expense of more fuel. A given amount of fuel has a limited amount of power, so more power means more fuel.
Ken
โAug-20-2014 07:24 PM