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Started By
Message
Posted on 2/12/17 at 4:19 pm to lsu xman
Would not be afraid at all. BUT 2 things to remember- 1. heat is a killer so synthetic oil should be required.
2. Oil coking (carbon) is a turbo killer and a pyrometer or a turbo timer or just some quiet idle time to cool things off can really help.
The point of cooling was driven home on a Case IH 8920 I used to drive. Pulling a 30k lb honey wagon and it was summer- Like 7 bars lit up on the pyrometer. I let it sit for 5 minutes while refueling it and down to 2 bars. If I had shut it down, the oil would have cooked/coked in the turbo. Same deal with powerstrokes or Cummins or John Deeres or Case IH turbos- let the thing cool before shutting it down or use some damn good oil, or both
2. Oil coking (carbon) is a turbo killer and a pyrometer or a turbo timer or just some quiet idle time to cool things off can really help.
The point of cooling was driven home on a Case IH 8920 I used to drive. Pulling a 30k lb honey wagon and it was summer- Like 7 bars lit up on the pyrometer. I let it sit for 5 minutes while refueling it and down to 2 bars. If I had shut it down, the oil would have cooked/coked in the turbo. Same deal with powerstrokes or Cummins or John Deeres or Case IH turbos- let the thing cool before shutting it down or use some damn good oil, or both
Posted on 2/12/17 at 4:57 pm to lsewwww
quote:
Would not be afraid at all. BUT 2 things to remember- 1. heat is a killer so synthetic oil should be required. 2. Oil coking (carbon) is a turbo killer and a pyrometer or a turbo timer or just some quiet idle time to cool things off can really help. The point of cooling was driven home on a Case IH 8920 I used to drive. Pulling a 30k lb honey wagon and it was summer- Like 7 bars lit up on the pyrometer. I let it sit for 5 minutes while refueling it and down to 2 bars. If I had shut it down, the oil would have cooked/coked in the turbo. Same deal with powerstrokes or Cummins or John Deeres or Case IH turbos- let the thing cool before shutting it down or use some damn good oil, or both
This has always been the case. Turbo owners should know this.
Posted on 2/12/17 at 4:59 pm to lsu xman
130K on my turbo car. No problems so far.
Posted on 2/12/17 at 5:24 pm to FightinTigersDammit
I totally agree. They should know it, but seen smart guys just shut the tractors off when they come in from the fields after plowing or pulling all day and just shut down.
For the ecoboost, Ford just says synthetic blend. Interestingly they upped the viscosity from 5w-20 to 5w-30. Lots of good stuff on the Ford forums and bobistheoilguy.com
7 years ago I bought a Cummins with a turbo failure and that truck still had residue of aluminum on the oil analysis for 2 chnages after that and P pulled shards of metal out of the intercooler when i cleaned the oil out of it.
For the ecoboost, Ford just says synthetic blend. Interestingly they upped the viscosity from 5w-20 to 5w-30. Lots of good stuff on the Ford forums and bobistheoilguy.com
7 years ago I bought a Cummins with a turbo failure and that truck still had residue of aluminum on the oil analysis for 2 chnages after that and P pulled shards of metal out of the intercooler when i cleaned the oil out of it.
Posted on 2/12/17 at 5:45 pm to lsewwww
quote:
7 years ago I bought a Cummins with a turbo failure and that truck still had residue of aluminum on the oil analysis for 2 chnages after that and P pulled shards of metal out of the intercooler when i cleaned the oil out of it.
Damn.
Posted on 2/12/17 at 6:53 pm to Sparkplug#1
quote:
Do some homework, buddy. It's standard knowledge with anyone that has Safari turboed their 80 series.
I know enough about physics and thermodynamics to know that the increase in power you are describing, from the same size engine, burning the same fuel, is impossible. Buddy. Final answer.
Posted on 2/12/17 at 7:56 pm to lsu xman
I got the 2015 with a 3.5 L reg engine.
I like it and I got 136,496 the engine runs like a champ.
To go fast put it in sport mode and around town just put it in normal driving.
I avg 22 mpg to 24 mpg.
Towed a 3,000 lb trailer 12 ft high from hotlanta to BR avg mileage 21 mpg.
Just replaced the Michelin tires at 120,000 miles. I had enough tread and I was really surprised when they pulled them off they still had some life.
Replaced front brakes at 100,000 miles.
Rear brakes are still have a lot of life.
It has been a great truck but I am going to try the 2.7 L eco boost for 2 years and see how she does.
If I would keep the truck longer than 2 yrs I would think hard about buying anything with a turbo.
I like it and I got 136,496 the engine runs like a champ.
To go fast put it in sport mode and around town just put it in normal driving.
I avg 22 mpg to 24 mpg.
Towed a 3,000 lb trailer 12 ft high from hotlanta to BR avg mileage 21 mpg.
Just replaced the Michelin tires at 120,000 miles. I had enough tread and I was really surprised when they pulled them off they still had some life.
Replaced front brakes at 100,000 miles.
Rear brakes are still have a lot of life.
It has been a great truck but I am going to try the 2.7 L eco boost for 2 years and see how she does.
If I would keep the truck longer than 2 yrs I would think hard about buying anything with a turbo.
This post was edited on 2/12/17 at 8:02 pm
Posted on 2/12/17 at 8:01 pm to johnnyrocket
quote:
Towed a 3,000 lb trailer 12 ft high from hotlanta to BR avg mileage 21 mpg.
Come the frick on.
Posted on 2/12/17 at 8:03 pm to lnomm34
I towed 3 of them and that was my avg mileage. The first one I did it with 500 miles on it.
My business partner has the 2.7 and he couldn't believe it. We looked at fuel receipts and it was close to what the avg came up to on the truck.
My business partner has the 2.7 and he couldn't believe it. We looked at fuel receipts and it was close to what the avg came up to on the truck.
Posted on 2/12/17 at 8:04 pm to AndyCBR
quote:
Now I am sure there are people out there with 75k on their truck and say they "have no problems". However, I bet that number gets dramatically less when the mileage gets over 100k or more.
bullshite
My 06 Duramax had 330000 miles on it when I traded it in. Never had the first issue
Posted on 2/12/17 at 8:09 pm to AndyCBR
quote:
Ford sure hasn't improved reliability in their turbo diesels over the years.
Aren't those made by IH?
Posted on 2/12/17 at 8:19 pm to Recovered
quote:
Long-term reliability of turbo cars/trucks?
77k on a ecoboost. 7k dollars in repairs that Ford said tough shite
What all went wrong with it?
Posted on 2/12/17 at 9:06 pm to johnnyrocket
quote:
Just replaced the Michelin tires at 120,000 miles.
I find this the hardest thing to believe on your post, out of all the things you said that sounded unbelievable.
Posted on 2/12/17 at 9:33 pm to johnnyrocket
quote:
I got the 2015 with a 3.5 L reg engine.
I like it and I got 136,496 the engine runs like a champ.
To go fast put it in sport mode and around town just put it in normal driving.
I avg 22 mpg to 24 mpg.
Towed a 3,000 lb trailer 12 ft high from hotlanta to BR avg mileage 21 mpg.
Just replaced the Michelin tires at 120,000 miles. I had enough tread and I was really surprised when they pulled them off they still had some life.
Replaced front brakes at 100,000 miles.
Rear brakes are still have a lot of life.
It has been a great truck but I am going to try the 2.7 L eco boost for 2 years and see how she does.
If I would keep the truck longer than 2 yrs I would think hard about buying anything with a turbo.
If you are serious, you are absolutely full of shite on all of your claims.
If a troll, 0/10.
Posted on 2/12/17 at 9:39 pm to Tempratt
quote:
Aren't those made by IH?
The 6.0 was by IH and a huge POS. EGR failures, stretchy head bolts and head gasket failures are the norm.
The 6.4 was by IH and a little less of a POS but my 2009 F350 work truck just had $2600 in repairs at 89k (broken rocker, bent pushrod, oil leak, egr leak). Head gasket failures are less common but rocker failures are common.
The 6.7 is supposedly a clean sheet design by Ford themselves but still lots of problems.
Thank the EPA for all of the BS emissions crap leading to a lot of these issues (although the 6.0 is pre DPF/DEF so there is no excuse).
Frick Ford Diesels in the arse. If you buy one you better set aside $10k for repairs during the first 200k miles.
Posted on 2/12/17 at 9:42 pm to johnnyrocket
I would love to hear your Vegas stories.
Posted on 2/12/17 at 9:42 pm to Sparkplug#1
sorry bro, you ain't getting 338 HP and 7mpg from a turbo and exhaust.
You would need a whole new engine for all that, lower compression, different valves and lifters.
No bolt on turbo is giving you that much. alone (with exhaust)
You would need a whole new engine for all that, lower compression, different valves and lifters.
No bolt on turbo is giving you that much. alone (with exhaust)
Posted on 2/12/17 at 9:49 pm to tigerinthebueche
quote:
bullshite
My 06 Duramax had 330000 miles on it when I traded it in. Never had the first issue
I've never owned a Duramax but Ford Diesels won't do that since the 7.3.
Regardless, your experience is not typical of the modern diesel experience since DPF and DEF have been required. Your truck was 11 years old and not like the current diesels.
Go buy one and see for yourself.
Posted on 2/12/17 at 10:19 pm to AndyCBR
The 6.7 liter powerstrokes have been great engines. The 6.0 and 6.4 were garbage
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