inmanlanier
Full Access Members
I have a '12 EL XLT with 67,000 miles on it. Other than leaking front struts right at warranty expiration that Ford would not warranty and the tow/haul button that recently fell apart, it's been an excellent vehicle.
One of my buds who is in the business and was religious about oil changes had a worn follower and cam on his 2010 at around 70K miles. When the repair was done, other issues were noted on the chain as well. I've read all the concerns with the issues; it appears one of the contributing causes to the mess may be plugging of the oil passages that feed the valve lubrication and phasers - according to the local joint that is well practiced in these repairs, typically the passenger bank forward is where you see issues more than anywhere else (purportedly the oil flow starts drive side front, goes to the rear of that head, then crosses over and flows front of passenger side).
I run synthetic. I've run 5W-30 and 10W-30 oil in my expedition. I run typically 15K miles on the oil. (oh here come the screaming meemies!). This practice is based on prior use of synthetics at extended drains with analysis and my bud's research (Nuclear Power diesel expert). We've never experienced oil issues with these intervals. SE Florida is also a environment where we don't see extremes.
I've just sent my first sample to be analyzed to Blackstone (results not back yet).
Has anyone on the forum had oil analysis that was done that gave them signs of pending failure or beginning wear of any of the items in the header?
Does anyone perform the analysis as a means to do so? I would imagine iron would possibly tell us of cam/follower/chain wear. What about material composition of the phasers and their wear component?
Thanks in advance. Please constrain comments on my lack of intelligence based on the oil weight or intervals I choose. Please share your thoughts and experience.
One of my buds who is in the business and was religious about oil changes had a worn follower and cam on his 2010 at around 70K miles. When the repair was done, other issues were noted on the chain as well. I've read all the concerns with the issues; it appears one of the contributing causes to the mess may be plugging of the oil passages that feed the valve lubrication and phasers - according to the local joint that is well practiced in these repairs, typically the passenger bank forward is where you see issues more than anywhere else (purportedly the oil flow starts drive side front, goes to the rear of that head, then crosses over and flows front of passenger side).
I run synthetic. I've run 5W-30 and 10W-30 oil in my expedition. I run typically 15K miles on the oil. (oh here come the screaming meemies!). This practice is based on prior use of synthetics at extended drains with analysis and my bud's research (Nuclear Power diesel expert). We've never experienced oil issues with these intervals. SE Florida is also a environment where we don't see extremes.
I've just sent my first sample to be analyzed to Blackstone (results not back yet).
Has anyone on the forum had oil analysis that was done that gave them signs of pending failure or beginning wear of any of the items in the header?
Does anyone perform the analysis as a means to do so? I would imagine iron would possibly tell us of cam/follower/chain wear. What about material composition of the phasers and their wear component?
Thanks in advance. Please constrain comments on my lack of intelligence based on the oil weight or intervals I choose. Please share your thoughts and experience.
