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Then why do you support a company that you know puts out poor quality?
If you think anything Toyota or Lexus builds is competition for the Expedition, then it's not even worth debating with you. Apples and oranges for a plethora of reasons. Other comments you made I agree with. If a vehicle costs $68k as in the case of my 17 Expy's original purchase price, it had damn well better make it through 100k miles without any serious issues. I sold my 05 F350 diesel after 100k miles. I had plowed with it in Mass winters every year that I had it. After that "abuse" I ended up in the end having only two issues with it. One after a week. The spring clamp that held the lower radiator hose cracked causing a drip of a/f. A worm clamp and five minutes later it never bothered me again. The second problem pissed me off, but all in all, being the only other issue I won't really complain. The rear backing plates rotted so bad the e-brake cable popped off and Ford wouldn't do anything about it.Then why do you support a company that you know puts out poor quality?
Yeah, the newer kits mount near/in the Battery box area. There is actually a kit to retrofit the older style to this one.
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I have seen it on 150, but haven’t seen it on Expy.
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I just called JLT, and they are aware of the problem. They are going to send me out the old style bracket, and a handful of what he called the dress up caps. In case I want to shorten the hoses to the correct length. Apparently the new bracket fits the F150's but not the Expedition's.
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Yeah it's not going to clear when the hood closes, without crushing the installation. I just clamped it into place and took this picture. I tried to get a picture with the hood down resting on the latch, there was maybe an inch gap above it. And the hood still needed to close, approximately 3 more inches. I tried about five times to get a picture with the hood ajar but I could not dial it in. With all that room to the rear I'm wondering why they didn't make the bracket go towards the firewall?
Relax! No one has said these are required. Maybe the EPA had something to do with Ford‘s decision not to put a catch can on vehicles because of people just draining them wherever. Ford decided to fix the problem by adding port injection back in their systems to wash the valves. I’m also pretty sure that oil change intervals that Ford recommends are EPA driven also. Don’t you think since they have to warrantee these engines for at least a certain amount of time that they would prefer you changed your oil in shorter intervals? So as far as brand bashing I do remember Toyota recalling there Tacoma‘s because the frames rotted and broke in half. Engineering flaw? I’ve got a friend who took his Tacoma into a dealer for a routine service and they wouldn’t give it back. They told him it was unsafe and it had too many miles to put a frame under it so Toyota told him what they would give him and it wasn’t enough to put him and something comparable. So they basically sold him a flawed design which failed miserably and then told him we’re giving you X amount of dollars for reimbursement for the junk we sold you and we are junking your truck sorry about your luck! I’ve been driving Fords since 1981 and haven’t had any major issues with any. I’ll just stick with what I know I guess.If these are required, why didn't Ford just build one into the system and make it part of regular maintenance to empty?
Here are some high mileage/torture ****** ecoboost F-150s that as far I know did not use catch cans.
https://news.pickuptrucks.com/2011/...a-torture-tested-ecoboost-v-6-looks-like.html
https://jalopnik.com/heres-how-a-ford-f-150-ecoboost-held-up-after-200-000-m-1790602670
https://www.f150ecoboost.net/forum/6-f150-ecoboost-chat/28082-300-000-miles-my-2011-eco-boost.html
As a consumer, I'm fairly simple in my wants. I expect a vehicle to last through the average pay off period (6 years now) and miles (90,000 miles) without major repair by following the factory recommended maintenance for the severity of driving that occurs. Actually I expect them to last even longer now a days.
I'm not going to add after market items to overcome bad design. I'll just move on to a manufacturer that does what I expect.
I went against my feelings about Ford's quality to purchase this Expy because it was so much less on the used market than Toyota/Lexus SUVs and it's been good through 50,000 miles(as it should). I also hedged my bet by paying $2,300 more for an extended warranty to 8years/125,000 miles expecting a failure that will cost more than that.
If I do experience problems because I didn't add a catch can or do 3,000 mile oil changes (even though Ford says up to 10,000), I'll simply never buy another ford again. I'll pay a premium for brands that have a track record of reliability.
To me having to add an after market component to make it run right or last is just plain wrong. The designers of this vehicle should have added it if required. If they are doing planned obsolesce then why am I buying this brand?
I installed the JLT oil separator last night on my 17 Expy. I have one on my 2013 Mustang GT and was amazed at how much oil is collected between oil changes.
Knowing the 3.5 Ecoboost uses direct injection, the injector never washes off the intake valves with atomized gasoline so carbon buildup is inevitable.
I had to play around with the hoses so the engine cover would properly fit but it worked out well. Here are some pics of the install. As you can see the JLT rubber hoses need to run underneath the wiring harness that has the aluminum heat wrap on it.
The part number is 3016P and it is the same one used for the 2017 F150's.
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Direct injection and VVT on small block turbo installed in a truck.
Shame on Ford. The need for a catch can after market says it all.
Just use synthetic and change often. Keep that oil clean and you have very good chance you won’t experience known issues w VVT.
Direct injection and VVT on small block turbo installed in a truck.
Shame on Ford. The need for a catch can after market says it all.
Just use synthetic and change often. Keep that oil clean and you have very good chance you won’t experience known issues w VVT.
It may help stop the valve coking but not sure how it’s gonna stop the innercooler from getting oil logged without a collection system in place. My opinion is that I would still install a catch can. I don’t like the idea of drilling a hole in the innercooler and have it weep oil constantly ....especially on my garage floor.