Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: jackelope on December 17, 2013, 09:02:35 PMThere's 2 coolers, a horizontal and vertical. Depending which one, the cab might have to come off to access. Easiest way is to pull the cab and do both.Who the hell designes a truck where any type of fix requires the removal of the cab? This is frigging absurd
There's 2 coolers, a horizontal and vertical. Depending which one, the cab might have to come off to access. Easiest way is to pull the cab and do both.
Quote from: kenzmad on December 17, 2013, 09:22:50 PMQuote from: jackelope on December 17, 2013, 09:02:35 PMThere's 2 coolers, a horizontal and vertical. Depending which one, the cab might have to come off to access. Easiest way is to pull the cab and do both.Who the hell designes a truck where any type of fix requires the removal of the cab? This is frigging absurd Its actually a quicker way to get access and saves man hours in the long run, Porsche has been doing it that way for years.
Quote from: huntnphool on December 27, 2013, 10:21:18 AMQuote from: kenzmad on December 17, 2013, 09:22:50 PMQuote from: jackelope on December 17, 2013, 09:02:35 PMThere's 2 coolers, a horizontal and vertical. Depending which one, the cab might have to come off to access. Easiest way is to pull the cab and do both.Who the hell designes a truck where any type of fix requires the removal of the cab? This is frigging absurd Its actually a quicker way to get access and saves man hours in the long run, Porsche has been doing it that way for years.While this may be true for a shop with bays full of lifts and special equipment it does no good for the backyard guy trying to save a few bucks doing his own work. Also some places won't even warranty or touch a truck that has been modified.
Quote from: DRobnsn on December 27, 2013, 11:08:12 AMQuote from: huntnphool on December 27, 2013, 10:21:18 AMQuote from: kenzmad on December 17, 2013, 09:22:50 PMQuote from: jackelope on December 17, 2013, 09:02:35 PMThere's 2 coolers, a horizontal and vertical. Depending which one, the cab might have to come off to access. Easiest way is to pull the cab and do both.Who the hell designes a truck where any type of fix requires the removal of the cab? This is frigging absurd Its actually a quicker way to get access and saves man hours in the long run, Porsche has been doing it that way for years.While this may be true for a shop with bays full of lifts and special equipment it does no good for the backyard guy trying to save a few bucks doing his own work. Also some places won't even warranty or touch a truck that has been modified. What does modified have anything to do with?
So maybe somebody else has experienced this with their diesel? I noticed after hauling the camper and boat on a couple trips last year that my coolant reservoir was empty. I took it into the shop and they checked it all out and "pressure tested" the coolant system (whatever that means) and found no leaks... said it was all good, topped it off and sent me on my way.Ran it around for months just fine and after the next trip working it hard again, it was low on fluid in the reservoir. I took it in again and again the said it all tested out fine, no problems. However, this time they put dye in the coolant and said if it does it again we will be able to put it under a light and find the leak from the dye and be able to identify where it's leaking. It finally goes through some more coolant and I take it back in so they can track the dye markings. Just got it back and they said there're no leaks, since there was no dye on anything?Maybe somebody can help me out here... if I top the reservoir off and work the truck hard and it's a half a quart low when I'm done, don't that mean it's leaking somewhere? The Ford dealer is adamant it's not leaking... any ideas or thoughts?Thanks!Go to powerstroke help.com their is a specific article about this exact issue.
The reason there are so many Ruger upgrades is because they're necessary.
Maybe this is one reason Ford has such a poor warranty.
Quote from: jackelope on December 30, 2013, 04:11:12 PM Jackelope, I've been hearing stories about cylinder wash down and oil contamination on diesels with dpf's which use a post injection for regeneration purposes. Have you heard of this?
Quote from: follow maggie on January 02, 2014, 09:39:46 AMMaybe this is one reason Ford has such a poor warranty.5 year 100k miles is a poor warranty?