What to look for when buying a gen3 expy

Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.

brcknrdg Rob

Well-Known Member
Joined
Nov 4, 2019
Posts
46
Reaction score
5
Location
Ventura Ca
I bought my 2008 with 125k miles on it and when I test drove it the driver window didn't work but the guy had it fixed when i bought it. After a few months the driver seat started catching or clicking like missing teeth or jumping, as mentioned above, but only in one spot. I pulled the seat at looked around under there around the track but I couldn't find anything so since we didn't move the seat much we just ignored it. No other issues until about 160k it would randomly lose alot of power and hesitate really bad and threw a bunch of codes but I ended up deciding on a tune up and the plugs didn't have any point left so that explained it and I changed the coils too just in case. Off and on, usually only while backing a small trailer, the cam phaser/s would clatter really loud and I would stop, put it in park and shut it off but it always cleared up when I restarted it. It's got over 200k on it and we are going to go ahead and change those just so it doesnt get worse. The passenger front window quit working around 200k. I changed one rear strut a few years ago and the other rear strut last year. Oh I used to go through brake light bulbs every few months so I switched to led and never replaced another one. Over all after putting 100k on it myself it has done extremely well. I have no complaints other than the hump in the hood catches the sun sometimes and glares the driver. Oh and the info center can be hard to see with that out dated green lighting. Excellent vehicle over all

This sounds like our 2009 XLT, the cable on the driver side window bound and broke at the pulley.No problem with brake lights. Driver side seat control stopped working due to the switch contacts being worn down(we use it a lot), same problem when backing up. Lost the water pump at 150,000. Blend motor actuator wore out. Im chasing the misfire but think it is only back until I get OEM replacements for the crappy afterparket ones I bought. Over all at 181000 this thing has taken care of us even if the nagevator lags on her maintenence before I remind her.
 

Hulkster

Active Member
Joined
Feb 9, 2020
Posts
41
Reaction score
13
Location
The colony, tx
I bought my 2008 with 125k miles on it and when I test drove it the driver window didn't work but the guy had it fixed when i bought it. After a few months the driver seat started catching or clicking like missing teeth or jumping, as mentioned above, but only in one spot. I pulled the seat at looked around under there around the track but I couldn't find anything so since we didn't move the seat much we just ignored it. No other issues until about 160k it would randomly lose alot of power and hesitate really bad and threw a bunch of codes but I ended up deciding on a tune up and the plugs didn't have any point left so that explained it and I changed the coils too just in case. Off and on, usually only while backing a small trailer, the cam phaser/s would clatter really loud and I would stop, put it in park and shut it off but it always cleared up when I restarted it. It's got over 200k on it and we are going to go ahead and change those just so it doesnt get worse. The passenger front window quit working around 200k. I changed one rear strut a few years ago and the other rear strut last year. Oh I used to go through brake light bulbs every few months so I switched to led and never replaced another one. Over all after putting 100k on it myself it has done extremely well. I have no complaints other than the hump in the hood catches the sun sometimes and glares the driver. Oh and the info center can be hard to see with that out dated green lighting. Excellent vehicle over all

This is like all of us. The window issue can be temporarily fixed with silicone spray. The brake bulbs are moisture or water getting into the lamps but yes led fixes that. Check your two upper vacuum hoses to see if they are pinched together and swap with some hoses. I did the high pressure oil pump at 175,000 and going strong. I have the seat skipping teeth issue but not sure if there is a fix other than replacing and thats not guaranteeing anything. Also check the spark plugs. I drive 2008 Ford Expedition Limited rear wheel 190,000
 

willymutt

Member
Joined
Nov 29, 2015
Posts
10
Reaction score
1
Location
Freeman, SD
We are looking at updating our 2011 Limited EL with a 2015-17. Our 11 has the rear tailgate pealing, electric running boards not working and rust on the rocker panels. Are there things to look out for on the 15-17 that are similar? Did they fix the pealing paint issue? Are there other common issues to be aware of and look for in the newer ones?

I've done the cam phaser lockouts on the 11 and put a 5* tune on. Would look at a 5* for the new one also.
 

Al Steel

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 14, 2020
Posts
67
Reaction score
26
Location
Virginia
Had an 08 Expy Limited. Picked it up with 14 miles on the clock, drove til 148,000 when a run in with a guard rail secondary to a deer strike ended it's reign. I had a love-hate relationship with it but had I to do it all over again and buy a used one of the same model, here is what I would look out for. I'm not talking about the usual used car/truck wear item stuff, these are issues I ran into that are specific to this truck. I experienced almost all of these issues and they can be big $$$ to fix. Thank GOD I got the warranty...

- Spark Plugs, spark plugs, spark plugs! - Let me say this from the outset. Like Bigfoot and the Chupacabra there is no such thing as a 100K mile plug. That's for 1 owner soccer Mom's that can't be bothered for their vehicle to be down for 3 hours once a year for routine maintenance. In the Ford 3V engine of this model year the 100K mile plug was a disaster. Check the maintenance records and if you don't see a spark plug change in the last 50K miles, consider looking elsewhere. You could be in for a $700-$1000 head/cylinder repair on the next plug change.

- End play in the crankshaft - This spells DEATH for your engine and a $7-8K (!!) repair if you don't have a warranty. Some motors in the 07-08 MY were defective in the assembly and didn't mate up perfectly with the transmission. The result, the crankshaft was allowed to move laterally mere thousands of an inch.. but that's enough to kill your engine around 50-70K miles. Despite religious oil changes and maintenance. The symptoms are subtle at first, slightly rough idle that resembles dirty injectors, minor spark, or fuel delivery. Then progresses to rough idle and eventually the engine will stall inexplicably and won't start until it cools. Then will restart and run for a bit but then stall. Eventually it won't start at all. So... what to look out for, check for signs of small metal shavings in oil.. I mean SMALL.. like metal powder. Of course it could also be like mine and the entire crankshaft seal plate was worn paper thin, cracked off and in the bottom of the oil pan too. :mad: If you see ANY evidence of this or strange running behavior as described, RUN AWAY!

- 4WD Wheel Slippage - In tight turns my 4WD would "slip". The front would buck hard enough to be a concern and it wasn't the wheels rubbing. I was told this was "normal" by the dealer, but I think he may have been avoiding another repair on a vehicle that he had already spent THOUSANDS on warranty work. Admittedly, I didn't use the 4WD enough in conditions where this happened a lot, but I never recalled it doing that during the first few years. May be an area to check because most owners of these vehicles rarely engage the 4WD. I would use mine as often as I could but make sure it's working correctly and shifts into all modes.

- Automatic running boards - The person that designed these deserves his own special place in Hell. It's absolutely the worst design EVER with the motor being integrated directly into the running board and placed in a high exposure location, unsealed, right under the damn vehicle. I constantly complained about those things, mostly because the awkward opening height was designed for Moms in heels and they opened so slowly that I was forever cracking my shins on them. Likewise if you were in deep snow, mud, sand, anything that isn't a grocery store parking lot, they would half deploy leaving you to search the poorly designed menu system to shut them off so you could exit the cab. NEVER liked them and this progressed straight to HATRED once they stopped working. As expected, 8 years of direct exposure to rain, salt, dirt, sand, snow, etc and the motors failed. I tried to limp them along by squirting in lubes, graphite, etc. Even pulled the motors apart and cleaned the windings. But no amount of care and maintenance could compensate for a truly terrible design and they eventually quit. If you want to replace them expect to shell out $1200 EACH for the integrated motor/running board combo... and that's if you like unpainted primer black. Tack on another $500-800 for paint and install. Don't even think about claiming these on the warranty either. I tried when one failed at 93K and 2 stealerships outright refused to cover them. Expect unavoidable problems with these at 100K+.. sorry... they just suck.

- DVD/CD Changer-Player - Whoever made these for Ford should also be waterboarded. Replaced 3 (yes 3) under the factory warranty. Plus it's nearly impossible to figure out how to navigate the awkward combination of controls and menus to get it working fully. Maybe your average teen could figure them out, but for me, I gave up after 2 hours with the manual on a 2 hour drive and just faded the sound to the back so my girls could watch Thumbelina for the 35th time. Watch for this to eventually fail or just not work. If you just HAVE to have the factory model of this POS so your kids can watch Little Mermaid on a screen slightly larger than the average cell phone, look to shell out $800+ bucks.. about the cost of 2 iPads.

- Corrosion on the lift gate - What is it about lift gates and Ford? You would think that the company that LITERALLY started the vehicle revolution would be able to get something as simple as a rear liftgate correct (see also Ford Explorer lift gate cracks). Alas, it's not to be. The aluminum liftgate on almost every single one of these vehicles shows some signs of corrosion from minor paint bubbling to large patches of rough white powder coated exposed metal. Mine was somewhere in between starting at at 90K miles. Despite "corrosion" being listed in the warranty (100K miles / 7 years), the dealership and Ford MoCo outright refused to cover it. If you find one without this "feature", count yourself blessed.

- Frame rust-through - Now I'm not talking about a little or even a lot of surface rust here, but it seems that the frames on these vehicles are prone to SEVERE car cancer especially in northern climes where state road crews aren't afraid to use rock salt. Maybe it's faulty undercoating or inferior (cheap) metal but it can be BAD. Take a hammer on your test drive and really wrap on the frame in spots. Pay very close attention to the rear near the sway bar/swing arms. Look for cover-up repairs or freshly painted sections. If you hit a dull spot or the hammer drives right through the frame... that's a hard "NO". Unlike the good ol' days, most welding shops wont touch a vehicle frame with a 10 foot pole due to liability concerns. If you are handy with a torch then you can weigh your options but you could be looking at a total loss. Donor frames, if you can find one, go for $3k, and that's before you even start the laborious process of swapping the entire vehicle over.

- Seat Heating Unit - If equipped, this can also be trouble. Mine went out with no warning at 76K miles with a very nasty acrid electric burning smell. So bad I pulled over and checked to make sure the dash hadn't caught fire. It didn't but after that smell, neither driver or passenger side worked. Another warranty repair that would have cost $1200. If you find one with a heated seat module that doesn't work then you could be shelling out some green or just get a $30 seat cover.

- Honorable Mention - Window Regulators - Why, why, why, in a $55K vehicle would something a SIMPLE as a window regulator be so poorly constructed that they would almost ALL fail before 100K?? 3 of mine did, 2 under warranty and the other, luckily my brother-in-law had a shop and got me the parts for his cost. Otherwise, look to spend $350+ on this common failure item. Listen for rattle inside the door when you close it and slow raising window. One is sign that the plastic tabs (yes) that hold the window in place have failed and your window will soon drop straight into the door panel, the other means that your motor is giving out. Either one will cost the same, unless the window breaks in the process.

- OH almost forgot... Poor Door Drainage. I began to notice a "sloshing" noise inside my door panels. A little investigation and the undersized drain holes at the bottom of the door panels seemed unusally prone to get clogged with dirt and debris. Once discovered it became part of my regular cleaning routine to stick a plastic knife or other non-metal probe up in the drain holes to make sure they ran free. This is probably the reason why I see so many of these with lower door panel rust.

This is not my opinion. I experienced all of these items in my 10 years of ownership. Keep in mind that I buy my cars for the long haul (usually not selling until 150K+ miles). In all my vehicles this one was one of my most expensive purchases and would have had the highest TCO of them all (by far) had I not gotten the warranty. Without the warranty, I probably would have lit it on fire around year 5. Not that I didn't enjoy the vehicle, it was a great car for the family. But the fact that so many very expensive things went wrong with a vehicle through poor design/craftsmanship that I had NEVER experienced before was very disappointing. All this in a truck that's supposed to be "built Ford TOUGH!", lol! the Ford emblem faded out to illegible by 80K.

Oh.. I did forget.. Air Ride Suspension - This goes bad too but I was lucky enough to be spared the out of warranty repair because the vehicle was totaled just as it started to go out. I'd stay away from models with this feature unless it's been recently fixed.
 

BlueStangGT

Full Access Members
Joined
Jun 14, 2005
Posts
101
Reaction score
47
Location
Oklahoma
I've not read through the entire thread so forgive me if this has been posted previously but as I shopped for my '14 I discovered that if you buy a Ford vehicle that had previously been purchased as CPO, the CPO Warranty follows the vehicle, not the purchaser.
 

PapaGegs

Member
Joined
Aug 13, 2019
Posts
6
Reaction score
0
Location
Indiana
My '13 has the hesitation/missing as well. Saving up for the plugs/coil packs route. 218,000 mi.
 

jimz

Full Access Members
Joined
Sep 28, 2018
Posts
168
Reaction score
34
Location
florida
I replaced fuel filter, drove out old gas, put in water remover and filled tank with new gas. Runs good now and only new part was the fuel filter.
 

RobK

Member
Joined
Apr 19, 2019
Posts
14
Reaction score
2
Location
Wisconsin
Just got my '17 xlt back from the dealer. This time it was the rear main seal leaking oil and luckily I have 200 miles before I hit 60k on the odometer. Last summer they replaced the front engine seal, intake manifold seal and vacuum pump seal, as they were all leaking oil. Since my power train warranty is about to expire, I'm not sure if I'm keeping this thing or not.
 
Top