Feb-16-2019 01:59 PM
Feb-19-2019 08:22 AM
Feb-18-2019 11:41 PM
FishOnOne wrote:Towing with a lot of live animals is NOT like Rving. You just cannot run into a dealership with many dogs and horses in tow. All those critters will need taking care of. A dealership is not the place. So most will try to make it to their destination where the animals can be taken care of. Sometimes they don't make it. I remember several cases where fellow trialers had to leave their animals in the care of others at camp, so they could go rescue the stranded trucks animals. Not a good situation for all involved.Huntindog wrote:FishOnOne wrote:Perhaps. But by then, they were finished with the people I know. Radiators seemed to be the biggest problem. Most had multiple failures. When you are traveling the country with thousands of dollars of the best horses and dogs to competitions chasing championships, and start missing events due to your new truck problems..... A change WILL be made quickly.Huntindog wrote:FishOnOne wrote:11-14 is about when I remember Ford wimping out the 450. I knew quite a few people in the Dog trial world that had them when they first came out.Huntindog wrote:
I remember for some years the 450 pickup had smaller axles, and IIRC, the wide track front axle was an option, then I believe they made different GVWRs available. Some actually had LRE tires. Not sure if that is still the case.
The wide track front axle was always standard for the F450 and was an option for the F350.
The F450 ran 17" tires from '11-'14. All other years they ran the 19.5" tires.
The F450 has a larger rear axle, larger brakes, heavier front suspension components, and a different rear spring pack than a F350.
The F450 is simply a beast...
They went away pretty quick due to reliability issues.
IIRC, the available gear ratios changed in the 11 models... I assume that they came back in the 15s... But by then they were no longer being used in the circles I ran with.
IIRC, when the 17" tires were being used, the brakes got smaller as well.
So smaller brakes, taller gears, and weaker tires, along with the reliability issues... All that put together pretty much ended their run in my community.
Those F450 with the 17" tires were essentially a F350 Tow Boss with the wide track and in the farming and ranching community I see they have been very reliable and continue to prove it every day just like my Super Duty.
Being stuck on the side of the road with 4-6 horses and up to 30 dogs, is a nightmare. A motel 6 is not gonna be a solution.
So to add to this conversation I've never seen or heard of one of these failed radiators stranding someone on the road. Perhaps the end result was an assumption, but you cannot connect the dot's to reality. One can safely assume a failed radiator will put your truck in the shop and down time will be the result.
Having said that, this radiator failure point on the driver side crimp on ends appears to be fixed on the 2017 and up trucks.
Feb-18-2019 05:19 PM
mich800 wrote:FishOnOne wrote:
So to add to this conversation I've never seen or heard of one of these failed radiators stranding someone on the road. Perhaps the end result was an assumption, but you cannot connect the dot's to reality. One can safely assume a failed radiator will put your truck in the shop and down time will be the result.
Having said that, this radiator failure point on the driver side crimp on ends appears to be fixed on the 2017 and up trucks.
The only issue I have heard about were due to neglect in correcting the issue and constantly running the coolant too low. I believe this was one of the issues with the cavitation eating away the front cover due to air leading to failures. But this was on the 6.4's, not sure if that was an issue on the 6.7's
Feb-18-2019 04:21 PM
FishOnOne wrote:
So to add to this conversation I've never seen or heard of one of these failed radiators stranding someone on the road. Perhaps the end result was an assumption, but you cannot connect the dot's to reality. One can safely assume a failed radiator will put your truck in the shop and down time will be the result.
Having said that, this radiator failure point on the driver side crimp on ends appears to be fixed on the 2017 and up trucks.
Feb-18-2019 03:37 PM
Huntindog wrote:FishOnOne wrote:Perhaps. But by then, they were finished with the people I know. Radiators seemed to be the biggest problem. Most had multiple failures. When you are traveling the country with thousands of dollars of the best horses and dogs to competitions chasing championships, and start missing events due to your new truck problems..... A change WILL be made quickly.Huntindog wrote:FishOnOne wrote:11-14 is about when I remember Ford wimping out the 450. I knew quite a few people in the Dog trial world that had them when they first came out.Huntindog wrote:
I remember for some years the 450 pickup had smaller axles, and IIRC, the wide track front axle was an option, then I believe they made different GVWRs available. Some actually had LRE tires. Not sure if that is still the case.
The wide track front axle was always standard for the F450 and was an option for the F350.
The F450 ran 17" tires from '11-'14. All other years they ran the 19.5" tires.
The F450 has a larger rear axle, larger brakes, heavier front suspension components, and a different rear spring pack than a F350.
The F450 is simply a beast...
They went away pretty quick due to reliability issues.
IIRC, the available gear ratios changed in the 11 models... I assume that they came back in the 15s... But by then they were no longer being used in the circles I ran with.
IIRC, when the 17" tires were being used, the brakes got smaller as well.
So smaller brakes, taller gears, and weaker tires, along with the reliability issues... All that put together pretty much ended their run in my community.
Those F450 with the 17" tires were essentially a F350 Tow Boss with the wide track and in the farming and ranching community I see they have been very reliable and continue to prove it every day just like my Super Duty.
Being stuck on the side of the road with 4-6 horses and up to 30 dogs, is a nightmare. A motel 6 is not gonna be a solution.
Feb-18-2019 10:38 AM
Feb-18-2019 10:30 AM
Grit dog wrote:You are correct. It started with me not sure if there were still wimp versions of the 450 being made, then drifted from there.Huntindog wrote:FishOnOne wrote:Perhaps. But by then, they were finished with the people I know. Radiators seemed to be the biggest problem. Most had multiple failures. When you are traveling the country with thousands of dollars of the best horses and dogs to competitions chasing championships, and start missing events due to your new truck problems..... A change WILL be made quickly.Huntindog wrote:FishOnOne wrote:11-14 is about when I remember Ford wimping out the 450. I knew quite a few people in the Dog trial world that had them when they first came out.Huntindog wrote:
I remember for some years the 450 pickup had smaller axles, and IIRC, the wide track front axle was an option, then I believe they made different GVWRs available. Some actually had LRE tires. Not sure if that is still the case.
The wide track front axle was always standard for the F450 and was an option for the F350.
The F450 ran 17" tires from '11-'14. All other years they ran the 19.5" tires.
The F450 has a larger rear axle, larger brakes, heavier front suspension components, and a different rear spring pack than a F350.
The F450 is simply a beast...
They went away pretty quick due to reliability issues.
IIRC, the available gear ratios changed in the 11 models... I assume that they came back in the 15s... But by then they were no longer being used in the circles I ran with.
IIRC, when the 17" tires were being used, the brakes got smaller as well.
So smaller brakes, taller gears, and weaker tires, along with the reliability issues... All that put together pretty much ended their run in my community.
Those F450 with the 17" tires were essentially a F350 Tow Boss with the wide track and in the farming and ranching community I see they have been very reliable and continue to prove it every day just like my Super Duty.
Being stuck on the side of the road with 4-6 horses and up to 30 dogs, is a nightmare. A motel 6 is not gonna be a solution.
So it really had nothing to do with the “450” components, but moreso with the “Ford” components that are/were used across multiple models?
Then what’s the relevance to this thread? If you said folks were bending axles and snapping leaf springs then it may be applicable.
Feb-18-2019 07:13 AM
Huntindog wrote:FishOnOne wrote:Perhaps. But by then, they were finished with the people I know. Radiators seemed to be the biggest problem. Most had multiple failures. When you are traveling the country with thousands of dollars of the best horses and dogs to competitions chasing championships, and start missing events due to your new truck problems..... A change WILL be made quickly.Huntindog wrote:FishOnOne wrote:11-14 is about when I remember Ford wimping out the 450. I knew quite a few people in the Dog trial world that had them when they first came out.Huntindog wrote:
I remember for some years the 450 pickup had smaller axles, and IIRC, the wide track front axle was an option, then I believe they made different GVWRs available. Some actually had LRE tires. Not sure if that is still the case.
The wide track front axle was always standard for the F450 and was an option for the F350.
The F450 ran 17" tires from '11-'14. All other years they ran the 19.5" tires.
The F450 has a larger rear axle, larger brakes, heavier front suspension components, and a different rear spring pack than a F350.
The F450 is simply a beast...
They went away pretty quick due to reliability issues.
IIRC, the available gear ratios changed in the 11 models... I assume that they came back in the 15s... But by then they were no longer being used in the circles I ran with.
IIRC, when the 17" tires were being used, the brakes got smaller as well.
So smaller brakes, taller gears, and weaker tires, along with the reliability issues... All that put together pretty much ended their run in my community.
Those F450 with the 17" tires were essentially a F350 Tow Boss with the wide track and in the farming and ranching community I see they have been very reliable and continue to prove it every day just like my Super Duty.
Being stuck on the side of the road with 4-6 horses and up to 30 dogs, is a nightmare. A motel 6 is not gonna be a solution.
Feb-18-2019 07:10 AM
Feb-18-2019 06:32 AM
4wheelingNUT!! wrote:spoon059 wrote:Yes, DRW is standard. I think the payload is adequate, but wished it was a little better. Of course, we all know it will handle more.4wheelingNUT!! wrote:
Ok, looked at F-450 Platinum 4wd, with all the bells, and whistles, has the fifthwheel prep pkg. The stamped limit was 4770 lbs for cargo payload carrying capacity.
The F450 comes standard with DRW, correct? I'm amazed at such a low payload. I've been DRW 1 ton diesels with almost 6,000 lbs of payload...
Feb-18-2019 05:14 AM
Cummins12V98 wrote:
People need to understand payload is a joke on the 350, 450 and 3500 DRW’s. WHY is it LESS on the 450??? Simple answer they are all self limited to the Class3 14,000# GVWR. 450 weighs more so less payload remains after subtracting trucks factory weight from 14k.
If they make GVWR higher they put the trucks in Commercial Classification and licensing and insurance costs increase.
Simply tow within your RAWR and pay for extra tonnage if you go over 14k.
Feb-18-2019 12:15 AM
FishOnOne wrote:Perhaps. But by then, they were finished with the people I know. Radiators seemed to be the biggest problem. Most had multiple failures. When you are traveling the country with thousands of dollars of the best horses and dogs to competitions chasing championships, and start missing events due to your new truck problems..... A change WILL be made quickly.Huntindog wrote:FishOnOne wrote:11-14 is about when I remember Ford wimping out the 450. I knew quite a few people in the Dog trial world that had them when they first came out.Huntindog wrote:
I remember for some years the 450 pickup had smaller axles, and IIRC, the wide track front axle was an option, then I believe they made different GVWRs available. Some actually had LRE tires. Not sure if that is still the case.
The wide track front axle was always standard for the F450 and was an option for the F350.
The F450 ran 17" tires from '11-'14. All other years they ran the 19.5" tires.
The F450 has a larger rear axle, larger brakes, heavier front suspension components, and a different rear spring pack than a F350.
The F450 is simply a beast...
They went away pretty quick due to reliability issues.
IIRC, the available gear ratios changed in the 11 models... I assume that they came back in the 15s... But by then they were no longer being used in the circles I ran with.
IIRC, when the 17" tires were being used, the brakes got smaller as well.
So smaller brakes, taller gears, and weaker tires, along with the reliability issues... All that put together pretty much ended their run in my community.
Those F450 with the 17" tires were essentially a F350 Tow Boss with the wide track and in the farming and ranching community I see they have been very reliable and continue to prove it every day just like my Super Duty.
Feb-17-2019 09:46 PM
spoon059 wrote:Yes, DRW is standard. I think the payload is adequate, but wished it was a little better. Of course, we all know it will handle more.4wheelingNUT!! wrote:
Ok, looked at F-450 Platinum 4wd, with all the bells, and whistles, has the fifthwheel prep pkg. The stamped limit was 4770 lbs for cargo payload carrying capacity.
The F450 comes standard with DRW, correct? I'm amazed at such a low payload. I've been DRW 1 ton diesels with almost 6,000 lbs of payload...
Feb-17-2019 06:00 PM
Huntindog wrote:FishOnOne wrote:11-14 is about when I remember Ford wimping out the 450. I knew quite a few people in the Dog trial world that had them when they first came out.Huntindog wrote:
I remember for some years the 450 pickup had smaller axles, and IIRC, the wide track front axle was an option, then I believe they made different GVWRs available. Some actually had LRE tires. Not sure if that is still the case.
The wide track front axle was always standard for the F450 and was an option for the F350.
The F450 ran 17" tires from '11-'14. All other years they ran the 19.5" tires.
The F450 has a larger rear axle, larger brakes, heavier front suspension components, and a different rear spring pack than a F350.
The F450 is simply a beast...
They went away pretty quick due to reliability issues.
IIRC, the available gear ratios changed in the 11 models... I assume that they came back in the 15s... But by then they were no longer being used in the circles I ran with.
IIRC, when the 17" tires were being used, the brakes got smaller as well.
So smaller brakes, taller gears, and weaker tires, along with the reliability issues... All that put together pretty much ended their run in my community.