โMay-14-2013 03:00 PM
Bob & Betsy - USN Aviation Ret'd '78 & LEO Ret'd '03 & "Oath Keeper Forever"
โMay-16-2013 04:29 PM
โMay-16-2013 02:34 PM
720Deere wrote:Big Katuna wrote:
Whats to worry about? They stood behind the 6.0 problems didn't they?
Well?
Actually everybody likes to act like 6.0 customers were left to swing in the wind and that certainly was not my experience. Mine was in the shop 3 times in 4 years with 2 of those trips being major repairs and I only spent $100 total on the repairs. You can't ask for much more than that as far as backing the product goes.
โMay-16-2013 02:30 PM
โMay-16-2013 10:00 AM
โMay-16-2013 05:20 AM
โMay-16-2013 04:50 AM
โMay-16-2013 04:48 AM
lbrjet wrote:
Several people on the forum have experienced this. It is old news and happens rarely.
โMay-16-2013 04:30 AM
โMay-15-2013 08:55 PM
markandkim wrote:That little engine as you put it is built with all forged internals and can handle much more power than they come with from the factory. That #1 rule, there is no replacement for displacement is total B.S. I know your just lashing out because your having a hard time wrapping your head around the fact that Fords little Eco V6 outperforms you big bad HEMI ! It will be ok, you are unfortunatley suffering from what us ecoboost owners call torque deficiency. ๐
You got to know, when you ask a little engine to do what they are asking there are going to be major problems. just follow the # 1 rule; There is no substitute for cubic inches. Remember when you daddy and your brother told you that? It still stands today, even with todays modern technology.
โMay-15-2013 07:36 PM
markandkim wrote:
You got to know, when you ask a little engine to do what they are asking there are going to be major problems. just follow the # 1 rule; There is no substitute for cubic inches. Remember when you daddy and your brother told you that? It still stands today, even with todays modern technology.
โMay-15-2013 06:29 PM
720Deere wrote:countryboy69 wrote:
my brother has an eco boost and a vw tdi. they both got inter coolers on the same day. basically anything with and inter cooler can have this issue.
This leads me to believe that driving habits have a lot to do with the problem. Just about every vehicle I have ever owned had its own little quirk and a simple change in driver behavior usually makes all the difference in the world. People get very upset when you tell them that they may be causing the problem because even the worst driver in the world somehow feels that they have superior driving skills. A friend had his girlfriend wreck his truck a few days ago and her defense was that she "drives better than any other girl out there". I think Ms. Patrick and the Force girls would probably beg to differ!
โMay-15-2013 05:04 PM
countryboy69 wrote:
my brother has an eco boost and a vw tdi. they both got inter coolers on the same day. basically anything with and inter cooler can have this issue.
โMay-15-2013 01:57 PM
โMay-15-2013 12:47 PM
โMay-15-2013 12:29 PM
boogie_4wheel wrote:
Not sure on the venturi effect... I do know a thing about carbs icing up. I had the same issue on my '70 pickup in the winter when I was in college in northern Utah. Really cold and going over the mountain pass the carb would ice up and the throttle would stick. My remedy was to modulate the throttle a little bit every couple minutes to keep it broken free.
I read more on the EB awhile back about high-humidity being a cause or magnifier to this condensation/misfire issue. I still feel that loading these things once in awhile will reduce/eliminate the problem; it shouldn't happen and owners shouldn't need to go out and flog their vehicles from time to time. It is just like when all the diesels went to DPFs. City driving, extended idle times, short-cycling, all lead to plugged DPFs. The solution was to drive them to get the exhaust gas temps up and help burn the soot out. I still feel that if these were 'worked' every once in awhile, water would not collect in the IC.