โFeb-18-2016 12:36 AM
โMar-05-2016 04:58 AM
โMar-04-2016 08:14 PM
shadows4 wrote:Flashman wrote:blofgren wrote:rowekmr wrote:
Yeah I have heard from a few shops that the Internationals 6.0l in the MDT that didn't have the hotter tuning by Ford had a much better track record. I also think they had less or none of the emission equipment but not sure.Turtle n Peeps wrote:Most of the 6.0 problems were related to the emissions equipment and not from the factory tuning.
Not according to Ford's own internal email documents that were presented in court. :E According to Ford "they" went over spec by a bunch with cylinder pressure.
It has been said that the detuned version in the E Series vans were better too; as you can see in my earlier posts our 2 at work definitely blow this myth out of the water. I would actually say they have been worse than the F-450 and F-550 crew cab dumps that we have (and had) and they have been far from stellar themselves.
The other issue that it has caused for us at work is cutting into production big time. Guys waiting for tow trucks, switching tools and materials into loaner and rental trucks and then back countless numbers of times takes its toll on productivity. We actually talked several times that these trucks could very well put a small or even mid size company out of business with the downtime and huge repair bills. And these trucks have been maintained VERY well with oil changes every 5k kms (3k miles) and more than recommended fuel filter, coolant changes, etc. all with Motorcraft filters. These issues are NOT related to lack of maintenance.
Well said.
A powerful condemnation of the Ford 6.0. And of the fact that Ford keep selling them for years after it became known how bad they were.
The real mystery was why people keep buying them??
As someone posted before - battered wife syndrome.
Some people just prefer a better truck. Even with the known problems I would take a Ford 6.0 over a Dodge or Ram any day.
โMar-04-2016 07:50 PM
shadows4 wrote:Flashman wrote:blofgren wrote:rowekmr wrote:
Yeah I have heard from a few shops that the Internationals 6.0l in the MDT that didn't have the hotter tuning by Ford had a much better track record. I also think they had less or none of the emission equipment but not sure.Turtle n Peeps wrote:Most of the 6.0 problems were related to the emissions equipment and not from the factory tuning.
Not according to Ford's own internal email documents that were presented in court. :E According to Ford "they" went over spec by a bunch with cylinder pressure.
It has been said that the detuned version in the E Series vans were better too; as you can see in my earlier posts our 2 at work definitely blow this myth out of the water. I would actually say they have been worse than the F-450 and F-550 crew cab dumps that we have (and had) and they have been far from stellar themselves.
The other issue that it has caused for us at work is cutting into production big time. Guys waiting for tow trucks, switching tools and materials into loaner and rental trucks and then back countless numbers of times takes its toll on productivity. We actually talked several times that these trucks could very well put a small or even mid size company out of business with the downtime and huge repair bills. And these trucks have been maintained VERY well with oil changes every 5k kms (3k miles) and more than recommended fuel filter, coolant changes, etc. all with Motorcraft filters. These issues are NOT related to lack of maintenance.
Well said.
A powerful condemnation of the Ford 6.0. And of the fact that Ford keep selling them for years after it became known how bad they were.
The real mystery was why people keep buying them??
As someone posted before - battered wife syndrome.
Some people just prefer a better truck. Even with the known problems I would take a Ford 6.0 over a Dodge or Ram any day.
โMar-03-2016 06:21 PM
Flashman wrote:blofgren wrote:rowekmr wrote:
Yeah I have heard from a few shops that the Internationals 6.0l in the MDT that didn't have the hotter tuning by Ford had a much better track record. I also think they had less or none of the emission equipment but not sure.Turtle n Peeps wrote:Most of the 6.0 problems were related to the emissions equipment and not from the factory tuning.
Not according to Ford's own internal email documents that were presented in court. :E According to Ford "they" went over spec by a bunch with cylinder pressure.
It has been said that the detuned version in the E Series vans were better too; as you can see in my earlier posts our 2 at work definitely blow this myth out of the water. I would actually say they have been worse than the F-450 and F-550 crew cab dumps that we have (and had) and they have been far from stellar themselves.
The other issue that it has caused for us at work is cutting into production big time. Guys waiting for tow trucks, switching tools and materials into loaner and rental trucks and then back countless numbers of times takes its toll on productivity. We actually talked several times that these trucks could very well put a small or even mid size company out of business with the downtime and huge repair bills. And these trucks have been maintained VERY well with oil changes every 5k kms (3k miles) and more than recommended fuel filter, coolant changes, etc. all with Motorcraft filters. These issues are NOT related to lack of maintenance.
Well said.
A powerful condemnation of the Ford 6.0. And of the fact that Ford keep selling them for years after it became known how bad they were.
The real mystery was why people keep buying them??
As someone posted before - battered wife syndrome.
โMar-03-2016 03:27 PM
shadows4 wrote:Flashman wrote:blofgren wrote:rowekmr wrote:
Yeah I have heard from a few shops that the Internationals 6.0l in the MDT that didn't have the hotter tuning by Ford had a much better track record. I also think they had less or none of the emission equipment but not sure.Turtle n Peeps wrote:Most of the 6.0 problems were related to the emissions equipment and not from the factory tuning.
Not according to Ford's own internal email documents that were presented in court. :E According to Ford "they" went over spec by a bunch with cylinder pressure.
It has been said that the detuned version in the E Series vans were better too; as you can see in my earlier posts our 2 at work definitely blow this myth out of the water. I would actually say they have been worse than the F-450 and F-550 crew cab dumps that we have (and had) and they have been far from stellar themselves.
The other issue that it has caused for us at work is cutting into production big time. Guys waiting for tow trucks, switching tools and materials into loaner and rental trucks and then back countless numbers of times takes its toll on productivity. We actually talked several times that these trucks could very well put a small or even mid size company out of business with the downtime and huge repair bills. And these trucks have been maintained VERY well with oil changes every 5k kms (3k miles) and more than recommended fuel filter, coolant changes, etc. all with Motorcraft filters. These issues are NOT related to lack of maintenance.
Well said.
A powerful condemnation of the Ford 6.0. And of the fact that Ford keep selling them for years after it became known how bad they were.
The real mystery was why people keep buying them??
As someone posted before - battered wife syndrome.
Some people just prefer a better truck. Even with the known problems I would take a Ford 6.0 over a Dodge or Ram any day.
โMar-03-2016 02:50 PM
Flashman wrote:blofgren wrote:rowekmr wrote:
Yeah I have heard from a few shops that the Internationals 6.0l in the MDT that didn't have the hotter tuning by Ford had a much better track record. I also think they had less or none of the emission equipment but not sure.Turtle n Peeps wrote:Most of the 6.0 problems were related to the emissions equipment and not from the factory tuning.
Not according to Ford's own internal email documents that were presented in court. :E According to Ford "they" went over spec by a bunch with cylinder pressure.
It has been said that the detuned version in the E Series vans were better too; as you can see in my earlier posts our 2 at work definitely blow this myth out of the water. I would actually say they have been worse than the F-450 and F-550 crew cab dumps that we have (and had) and they have been far from stellar themselves.
The other issue that it has caused for us at work is cutting into production big time. Guys waiting for tow trucks, switching tools and materials into loaner and rental trucks and then back countless numbers of times takes its toll on productivity. We actually talked several times that these trucks could very well put a small or even mid size company out of business with the downtime and huge repair bills. And these trucks have been maintained VERY well with oil changes every 5k kms (3k miles) and more than recommended fuel filter, coolant changes, etc. all with Motorcraft filters. These issues are NOT related to lack of maintenance.
Well said.
A powerful condemnation of the Ford 6.0. And of the fact that Ford keep selling them for years after it became known how bad they were.
The real mystery was why people keep buying them??
As someone posted before - battered wife syndrome.
โMar-03-2016 10:30 AM
blofgren wrote:rowekmr wrote:
Yeah I have heard from a few shops that the Internationals 6.0l in the MDT that didn't have the hotter tuning by Ford had a much better track record. I also think they had less or none of the emission equipment but not sure.Turtle n Peeps wrote:Most of the 6.0 problems were related to the emissions equipment and not from the factory tuning.
Not according to Ford's own internal email documents that were presented in court. :E According to Ford "they" went over spec by a bunch with cylinder pressure.
It has been said that the detuned version in the E Series vans were better too; as you can see in my earlier posts our 2 at work definitely blow this myth out of the water. I would actually say they have been worse than the F-450 and F-550 crew cab dumps that we have (and had) and they have been far from stellar themselves.
The other issue that it has caused for us at work is cutting into production big time. Guys waiting for tow trucks, switching tools and materials into loaner and rental trucks and then back countless numbers of times takes its toll on productivity. We actually talked several times that these trucks could very well put a small or even mid size company out of business with the downtime and huge repair bills. And these trucks have been maintained VERY well with oil changes every 5k kms (3k miles) and more than recommended fuel filter, coolant changes, etc. all with Motorcraft filters. These issues are NOT related to lack of maintenance.
โMar-01-2016 05:22 PM
rowekmr wrote:
Yeah I have heard from a few shops that the Internationals 6.0l in the MDT that didn't have the hotter tuning by Ford had a much better track record. I also think they had less or none of the emission equipment but not sure.Turtle n Peeps wrote:Most of the 6.0 problems were related to the emissions equipment and not from the factory tuning.
Not according to Ford's own internal email documents that were presented in court. :E According to Ford "they" went over spec by a bunch with cylinder pressure.
โMar-01-2016 04:54 PM
Turtle n Peeps wrote:Most of the 6.0 problems were related to the emissions equipment and not from the factory tuning.
Not according to Ford's own internal email documents that were presented in court. :E According to Ford "they" went over spec by a bunch with cylinder pressure.
โMar-01-2016 03:35 PM
Most of the 6.0 problems were related to the emissions equipment and not from the factory tuning.
โMar-01-2016 02:29 PM
blofgren wrote:mabynack wrote:
Background: The 6.0 was built by Navistar for Ford. Ford sued Navistar because the 6.0 had the most expensive recalls of any engine Ford has ever put into its vehicles. Recall costs per unit are around 10,000. Navistar responded to Ford's suit by saying that they had designed the engine to be a 300 HP engine and Ford had retuned it to 340 HP to beat its competitors. The internal components of the engine weren't designed for the additional pressures and they failed.
This was the first generation of diesels to use Catalytic converters and pollution controls, so a lot of the issues were growing pains. One of the components that frequently fails is the Exhaust Gas Recirculation Cooler. The EGR injects small amounts of burned exhaust back into the combustions chamber to reduce pollution and allow the engine to run cooler under heavy loads. The cooler uses engine coolant to cool the 1400 degree exhaust before it's injected back into the engine. The cooler sometimes gets plugged with casting sand leftover from manufacturing the engines and blocks coolant from entering the cooler. At that point the EGR cooler can melt, allowing engine coolant to enter the combustion chambers. Small amounts of coolant in the combustion chamber will appear as white smoke under load and you can see bubbles in the coolant tank. If the hole gets too large and allows too much coolant into the combustion chamber you get a hydro lock condition that can bend connecting rods and blow the tops off pistons.
Another problem with the EGR Cooler is caused by using an improper coolant. The high heat from the EGR cooler can cause coolant to form silicate solids which will also clog the cooler. Ford/Caterpillar make a special coolant that will not form silicate when exposed to the high heat.
Coolant travels through the engine oil cooler on its way to the EGR cooler, so if the EGR cooler gets plugged, the engine oil cooler stops working.
The engine also uses high pressure oil to actuate the injectors. The pressures can run over 3500 psi. It's very important to keep clean oil in the engine. The High Pressure Oil System has O-rings that will eventually leak. They're located under the valve covers, so the leak is internal to the engine and you won't notice any oil on the outside of the engine. The engine gradually looses power.
Another problem is the Fuel Injector Control Module (FICM). I've had to replace two of them on my truck. One of Ford's software updates increased the voltage that the FICM operates at in order to increase the temperature and speed the warm up. The FICM wasn't designed for the additional voltage and it would melt the solder connections. I believe that Ford changed the voltage back to the intended level on a subsequent software update. There are companies that sell remanufactured FICMs that have high temperature solder connections.
Another issue was the fuel pressure regulator springs. The original springs would get weak over time and the engine would loose power. The springs on my truck broke and the truck would randomly quit when cruising down the road. The spring is located at the top of the engine near or on the fuel filter canister and is fairly easy to change. Unfortunately the knot heads at the local Ford dealer decided I needed my Turbocharger cleaned and charged me $1300 in addition to the $80 for the spring. I told them it was a fuel pressure issue, but they went ahead and cleaned the turbo anyway. That's the last time I'll ever do business with them because that was the third time in a row they did unauthorized work on my truck and charged me for it.
Ford purchased some of the earlier trucks back from consumers due to the extensive recall issues.
Ford no longer purchases engines from Navistar. They build their own and they use a different design.
Yes you have covered off some of the issues; unfortunately there are more.
You can likely expect to put a set of injectors in your truck in the fairly near future depending on how long it ran with low fuel pressure because that kills them along with oil system problems, over voltage from FICM, etc.
โMar-01-2016 11:09 AM
mabynack wrote:
Background: The 6.0 was built by Navistar for Ford. Ford sued Navistar because the 6.0 had the most expensive recalls of any engine Ford has ever put into its vehicles. Recall costs per unit are around 10,000. Navistar responded to Ford's suit by saying that they had designed the engine to be a 300 HP engine and Ford had retuned it to 340 HP to beat its competitors. The internal components of the engine weren't designed for the additional pressures and they failed.
This was the first generation of diesels to use Catalytic converters and pollution controls, so a lot of the issues were growing pains. One of the components that frequently fails is the Exhaust Gas Recirculation Cooler. The EGR injects small amounts of burned exhaust back into the combustions chamber to reduce pollution and allow the engine to run cooler under heavy loads. The cooler uses engine coolant to cool the 1400 degree exhaust before it's injected back into the engine. The cooler sometimes gets plugged with casting sand leftover from manufacturing the engines and blocks coolant from entering the cooler. At that point the EGR cooler can melt, allowing engine coolant to enter the combustion chambers. Small amounts of coolant in the combustion chamber will appear as white smoke under load and you can see bubbles in the coolant tank. If the hole gets too large and allows too much coolant into the combustion chamber you get a hydro lock condition that can bend connecting rods and blow the tops off pistons.
Another problem with the EGR Cooler is caused by using an improper coolant. The high heat from the EGR cooler can cause coolant to form silicate solids which will also clog the cooler. Ford/Caterpillar make a special coolant that will not form silicate when exposed to the high heat.
Coolant travels through the engine oil cooler on its way to the EGR cooler, so if the EGR cooler gets plugged, the engine oil cooler stops working.
The engine also uses high pressure oil to actuate the injectors. The pressures can run over 3500 psi. It's very important to keep clean oil in the engine. The High Pressure Oil System has O-rings that will eventually leak. They're located under the valve covers, so the leak is internal to the engine and you won't notice any oil on the outside of the engine. The engine gradually looses power.
Another problem is the Fuel Injector Control Module (FICM). I've had to replace two of them on my truck. One of Ford's software updates increased the voltage that the FICM operates at in order to increase the temperature and speed the warm up. The FICM wasn't designed for the additional voltage and it would melt the solder connections. I believe that Ford changed the voltage back to the intended level on a subsequent software update. There are companies that sell remanufactured FICMs that have high temperature solder connections.
Another issue was the fuel pressure regulator springs. The original springs would get weak over time and the engine would loose power. The springs on my truck broke and the truck would randomly quit when cruising down the road. The spring is located at the top of the engine near or on the fuel filter canister and is fairly easy to change. Unfortunately the knot heads at the local Ford dealer decided I needed my Turbocharger cleaned and charged me $1300 in addition to the $80 for the spring. I told them it was a fuel pressure issue, but they went ahead and cleaned the turbo anyway. That's the last time I'll ever do business with them because that was the third time in a row they did unauthorized work on my truck and charged me for it.
Ford purchased some of the earlier trucks back from consumers due to the extensive recall issues.
Ford no longer purchases engines from Navistar. They build their own and they use a different design.
โMar-01-2016 05:51 AM
โFeb-29-2016 05:20 PM
rowekmr wrote:
We had a 2014 or 2015 F550 6.7L with special bed on it that has been in and out of our motor maintenance. Actually right now I think it is and have heard that our city might be switching to gassers now. I personally drove it many times and didn't have any problems with it but I let it warm up when its cold, take it easy until the temps are in the normal range. I try to drive it longer when it is regenerating.
If I followed your logic I would think the 6.7l MUST be bad because it is always in the shop and I hear all the other drivers complaining that it takes a sec to start (glow plugs), smell fumes and it smokes (regen) and they hear a whine sometimes (turbo). I am more inclined to say operator error coupled with maintenance errors (they don't use dealership). I have worked for several companies that had fleet vehicles and my experience is the drivers dog them out, the mechanics do general maintenance but not always have the up to date info, TSB and computer flashes that the newer trucks have.