I love my 2016 Chevy 3500, but there are two things that irk me.
1. Having to put the DEF fluid in under the hood. At the very least, they should have placed the fill port closer to the grill, instead of up near the firewall.
2. The air filter box arrangement is a joke. Some cam-over clips would have been nicer than the Phillips screws (that you can't properly line a screwdriver up to, because they put a brace in the way.
I love my 2016 Chevy 3500, but there are two things that irk me.
1. Having to put the DEF fluid in under the hood. At the very least, they should have placed the fill port closer to the grill, instead of up near the firewall.
2. The air filter box arrangement is a joke. Some cam-over clips would have been nicer than the Phillips screws (that you can't properly line a screwdriver up to, because they put a brace in the way.
I saw that one, thankfully it's on the other side of the continent from me. I had that same truck with a 302 AT. It would be a fun toy, but don't ask it to tow very much.
Having finally finished reading this thread from start to finish my recent itch to update the 94 F250 has been scratched. Time for new shocks, injectors, glow plugs and 150,000 more (or more) miles.
That's what is generally referred to as "first world problems".
Best buy is a mid option level truck. You should be able to get at least $10K off MSRP this summer and much more with special offers. So $35-40 K gets a real nice gas truck, fancier than what you could buy in most top end truck a few years ago.
:thumbsup: My son just bought a brand new 2018 f150 xlt. 4x4, ecoboost, 10 speed tranny, I guess kind of loaded for an xlt for $43,000. Really nice truck.
I sure hope it lasts, not Found On Roadside Dead or Fixed Or Repaired Daily.



My wife and I bought brand new identical Mustangs from a local Ford dealer, except hers automatic, mine 6 sp. manual.
Today I realized I have got to have a truck.
A "trash" truck, get gas/diesel, lumber.
The same dealer had this...1993 F150 XLT 4x4. It belonged to an older lady who had horses. Clean carfax except in pictures dent in drivers rear quarter. 300 cu in 6 Ford has had forever. It runs like a top, glove box packed full of receipts, new lots of stuff. A.C. blows ice cubes, 4wd high & low range , radio, lumbar air seats (I've never seen that) towing package, no exception everything works. Having horses, inside was and still is very dirty.
Handles, runs great, no noises, smoke. Gauges in good range for everything. Michelin tires great shape. Only problem is...200k miles!
What's it worth, did I make an ok deal?
I wrote a check for $2,312.
A truck that runs for that much is a deal.
Last night I read about the Ford 300-6. In consumer vehicles from 1965-1996...but they may still be producing them, other applications. They said were used in UPS trucks. 300k+ miles out of them is not uncommon.
Mine is 4 speed. I believe it's Borg Warner T-18.Having a towing package doesn't always give you a good axle ratio for towing. Typically, it's added cooling to protect the vehicle. Ford also adjusts the front and back springs to different capacities and rates that matches the intended use (i.e. camper vs bumper pull).
The oil gauge is really not an oil gauge. It's an on/off switch sender unit just like the old idiot light. In their case they send the signal to a gauge and a resistor. Once you have oil pressure, it will always read the same mid level. Get the engine hot from some highway driving. Then come to a stop and let it idle. You'll find that the oil press will not move or drop. One of Ford's better ideas?
Having the F-150, you probably have the Mazda M5OD-R2 light duty transmission:
1 - 3.90 : 1
2 - 2.25 : 1
3 - 1.49 : 1
4 - 1.00 : 1
5 - .80 : 1
R - 3.39 : 1