โApr-11-2016 05:48 PM
โApr-16-2016 09:20 AM
โApr-15-2016 11:27 AM
transamz9 wrote:Rangerman40 wrote:
Just a little info on the FICM. The job of the FICM is to take the 12v from the battery and quadruple it to 48v to fire the injectors. International used to mount the FICM in a different location but Ford chose to mount it nearly on the drivers side valve cover where it is subjected to tons of heat/cool cycles and vibration. Consequently the soldering on the boards in the FICM begins to crack and your 48v starts to slowly drop. Undiagnosed at startup when the FICM is only putting out <45v you start destroying your injectors. If you own a 6.0 the one thing you do need is an Edge Insight so you can watch your FICM voltage constantly...... Care to take a guess why I know all of this info?
Full synthetic oil changes every 5k, fuel filters every 10k, and keep and eye on the difference in temp between oil and coolant. Once it creeps up to 15 degrees or so it's time for a new oil cooler.
You batteries can also strain the FICM. After start up the electrical system is programmed to run off the batteries for a programmed time depending on temp. It can take up to two minutes in cold weather. Your batteries can have enough juice to start the truck fine but not hold enough to keep the voltage up while running until the Alt kicks in. If your battery voltage drops below 11.8 after start up then the batteries need to be replaced.
โApr-15-2016 07:31 AM
Rangerman40 wrote:
Just a little info on the FICM. The job of the FICM is to take the 12v from the battery and quadruple it to 48v to fire the injectors. International used to mount the FICM in a different location but Ford chose to mount it nearly on the drivers side valve cover where it is subjected to tons of heat/cool cycles and vibration. Consequently the soldering on the boards in the FICM begins to crack and your 48v starts to slowly drop. Undiagnosed at startup when the FICM is only putting out <45v you start destroying your injectors. If you own a 6.0 the one thing you do need is an Edge Insight so you can watch your FICM voltage constantly...... Care to take a guess why I know all of this info?
Full synthetic oil changes every 5k, fuel filters every 10k, and keep and eye on the difference in temp between oil and coolant. Once it creeps up to 15 degrees or so it's time for a new oil cooler.
โApr-15-2016 06:43 AM
mabynack wrote:thomasgunnar wrote:Rangerman40 wrote:
Just a little info on the FICM. The job of the FICM is to take the 12v from the battery and quadruple it to 48v to fire the injectors. International used to mount the FICM in a different location but Ford chose to mount it nearly on the drivers side valve cover where it is subjected to tons of heat/cool cycles and vibration. Consequently the soldering on the boards in the FICM begins to crack and your 48v starts to slowly drop. Undiagnosed at startup when the FICM is only putting out <45v you start destroying your injectors. If you own a 6.0 the one thing you do need is an Edge Insight so you can watch your FICM voltage constantly...... Care to take a guess why I know all of this info?
Full synthetic oil changes every 5k, fuel filters every 10k, and keep and eye on the difference in temp between oil and coolant. Once it creeps up to 15 degrees or so it's time for a new oil cooler.
Scangauge will work as well. Just not the same nice colors. Other than the triple gauge pod on the pillar I monitor things with a scangauge. Of the 4 available things I can monitor at once one is battery voltage and FICM voltage.
I use a scan gauge, too. I monitor oil temp, coolant temp, FICM voltage and main injector pressure. I have 120,000 on my 06 Power stroke and have had 2 FICMS. I'm still on the original injectors.
I read the court case documents that were filed when Ford sued Navistar. One of the statements that I remember is that Ford said the 6.0 had the highest recall costs of any engine they've ever used. They had a large number of recalls and the average cost was over $1000 per unit.
Navistar claims that Ford modified the engines to produce torque and HP that were beyond the design limits. It was originally designed as a 300 hp engine and Ford tuned it to 340 hp.
โApr-15-2016 06:14 AM
thomasgunnar wrote:Rangerman40 wrote:
Just a little info on the FICM. The job of the FICM is to take the 12v from the battery and quadruple it to 48v to fire the injectors. International used to mount the FICM in a different location but Ford chose to mount it nearly on the drivers side valve cover where it is subjected to tons of heat/cool cycles and vibration. Consequently the soldering on the boards in the FICM begins to crack and your 48v starts to slowly drop. Undiagnosed at startup when the FICM is only putting out <45v you start destroying your injectors. If you own a 6.0 the one thing you do need is an Edge Insight so you can watch your FICM voltage constantly...... Care to take a guess why I know all of this info?
Full synthetic oil changes every 5k, fuel filters every 10k, and keep and eye on the difference in temp between oil and coolant. Once it creeps up to 15 degrees or so it's time for a new oil cooler.
Scangauge will work as well. Just not the same nice colors. Other than the triple gauge pod on the pillar I monitor things with a scangauge. Of the 4 available things I can monitor at once one is battery voltage and FICM voltage.
โApr-14-2016 11:37 PM
Rangerman40 wrote:
Just a little info on the FICM. The job of the FICM is to take the 12v from the battery and quadruple it to 48v to fire the injectors. International used to mount the FICM in a different location but Ford chose to mount it nearly on the drivers side valve cover where it is subjected to tons of heat/cool cycles and vibration. Consequently the soldering on the boards in the FICM begins to crack and your 48v starts to slowly drop. Undiagnosed at startup when the FICM is only putting out <45v you start destroying your injectors. If you own a 6.0 the one thing you do need is an Edge Insight so you can watch your FICM voltage constantly...... Care to take a guess why I know all of this info?
Full synthetic oil changes every 5k, fuel filters every 10k, and keep and eye on the difference in temp between oil and coolant. Once it creeps up to 15 degrees or so it's time for a new oil cooler.
โApr-14-2016 11:15 PM
โApr-14-2016 02:49 PM
FishOnOne wrote:Grit dog wrote:
Imo as important as its condition and how it runs today is the maint records. 6.0s rely much more on impeccable maint than their competition. Both sides of the hpop, coolant issues to name a few.
Wrong.... another misconception..... The 6.0's rely on that you use a Ford Motorcraft fuel filter or a Racor brand fuel filter (There made by Racor) that is designed with a aquablock material to prevent water getting to the injectors. All aftermarket fuel filters don't have this feature and will kill the injectors.
Oil filters again you must use Ford Motorcraft filters or Racor brand oil filters (Again they're made by Racor). All aftermarket oil filters have problems by either not fitting correctly into the filter housing and allowing the majority of the oil to bypass the filter or the filter media imploding clogging the HPOP side of the system.
Change the coolant at the first 100k miles and 50k miles thereafter using the correct Ford Gold coolant and distilled water.
The only really maintenance intensive item is making sure your batteries stay healthy to protect the FICM in which a damaged FICM will cause all kinds of issues short term and long term.
I did the above items with OCI of 7500 miles, replaced/cleaned the EGR valve a couple of times (another maintenance item) and inspect that the soot build up is dry. During the course of 7 years/170k miles and my truck ran like a top the day I sold it with no engine work, all original injectors still making the same fuel economy since it was new.
โApr-13-2016 08:49 PM
Hank85713 wrote:
Again go to the truck specific forums, the ford gold is the main suspect for clogged egr/oil coolers. Get catapiller ELC but dont use the ford gold. The ELC is a pink/purplish in color, nothing green and I dont think the orange color is any good either.
The forums will also recommend a coolant filter just like the big trucks have (and school buses) I also run a amsoil bypass oil filter setup on mine. Do you have access to a scan gauge of any sort? again try to find someone familiar with this setup and have them take a look. Not all gm or dodge products are purfect either so you can also find a dog in them. Just read thru their forums for their issues. Buying anything used is buying a pig in a poke, be it ford, gm or dodge. No matter what you buy, be sure to have some extra funds available to fix whatever you find. old dodges have block and dowel pin issues, gms had wiring issues and fuel pumps. So there is no gauranties that any of them will be problem free, but ya need to go to the right forums and research the engine of choice you are interested in.
โApr-13-2016 07:29 PM
โApr-13-2016 07:15 PM
Grit dog wrote:
Imo as important as its condition and how it runs today is the maint records. 6.0s rely much more on impeccable maint than their competition. Both sides of the hpop, coolant issues to name a few.
โApr-13-2016 05:11 PM
bamafeaver wrote:
Looking to purchase a 2007 Ford 250 6.0 diesel that has been bullet proofed. Would this be a good dependable Ford 250 to pull a Jayco 7900 pound dry weight Fifth Wheel as well as a daily driver.
โApr-13-2016 04:34 PM
โApr-13-2016 06:20 AM