robertm
Veteran Member
Tractor guy, you’d better do some research in the new 5.0L. It’s far from reliable, and only getting worse. It’ll never make the 2021 redesign.
Tractor guy, you’d better do some research in the new 5.0L. It’s far from reliable, and only getting worse. It’ll never make the 2021 redesign.
I have posted before where the 2018 and newer 5.0 are having oil consumption problems. There is quite a bit of it on the F150 forums. Like most cases most people are fine but reading between the lines, I think it is an issue. They are aluminum blocks and in the past they had cylinder liners but in 2018 changed to something like a plasma welded liner(not the exact term).
I have posted before where the 2018 and newer 5.0 are having oil consumption problems. There is quite a bit of it on the F150 forums. Like most cases most people are fine but reading between the lines, I think it is an issue. They are aluminum blocks and in the past they had cylinder liners but in 2018 changed to something like a plasma welded liner(not the exact term).
Earlier in this thread I expressed my feeling that a pushrod engine was going backwards in design. I didn't know much of anything about the 6.2 offering. The 5.0 Coyote engine has been pretty reliable in both the mustang and truck configuration.
A while back I saw a F250 with a 6.2 for cheap and the dealer said it had a knocking noise in the engine. Doing some research online I found numerous complaints of 6.2 gassers with engine failures and noises so I decided not to go down a repair path. Seems like the same issues Ford had with the 6.0 diesel engine. It's hard to understand how Ford has remained the top selling truck with their recent history of engine problems.
I have posted before where the 2018 and newer 5.0 are having oil consumption problems. There is quite a bit of it on the F150 forums. Like most cases most people are fine but reading between the lines, I think it is an issue. They are aluminum blocks and in the past they had cylinder liners but in 2018 changed to something like a plasma welded liner(not the exact term).
I believe he's referring to the new GM 6.6 gas engine that's just been introduced. Would be interested to see how it compares to the new Ford 7.3.
I had a new 2012 6.2 F350 4x4 regular cab. It was a real nice motor, plenty for that truck and my needs. Also had a 15 F350 4x4 Platinum with the 6.2. It was also trouble free and power was adequate for around town and as a casual highway truck. ..I found it a bit underpowered pulling 8k+. It would do it but you knew the load was back there. Neither one had any oil consumption issues.
...I also have a 1999 F 150 now that is my run around beater truck..it's got 180k on it... for some reason I like it and keep throwing money at it to keep it going..it's a 5.4 4x4 extra cab and it burns between 1.5 and 2 quarts between 3k mile oil changes.
Here’s a video of an engine tear down of Ford’s new 7.3L gas motor. Pretty beefy bottom end....
Skip to 2:10 in the video to get to the good part:
7.3L Godzilla Ford V8 Bottom End Teardown ? How Big Can this Engine GO? Crank, Rods, Piston, Block - YouTube
Two things....what is going on with that weird saw cut between the cylinders at the deck? Right at the place the cylinder pressures are greatest (TDC), the cylinder thickness is quite thin.
The guy said it's for cooling and that it helped with reliability. Siamesed cylinders don't have cooling jackets between them so that area gets hot but that cylinder design also has it's advantages so Ford tried to get the best of both worlds by adding a cooling channel