BlueAngel19
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Experience with my S550 has been a nightmare. At first I had always been dreaming of a mustang for many years and finally got a 2019 GT with only 30k miles. It was intended as a daily/weekend car but shortly turned into a project. My experience does not represent all S550's.
Nevertheless, shortly after owning it stalled at stops/in traffic and rough idle with no codes. Figured it was a vac leak or VCT solenoids so I tore into it and discovered premature camshaft wear on the lobes/followers on left bank with some metal in oil. Cause? Undetermined. (Car had a perfect oil change history and the engine was perfectly clean on the inside). This is rare, one other forum member has a thread on this.
More details here: https://www.mustang6g.com/forums/threads/abnormal-camshaft-lobe-wear.209347/
Anyways, replaced cams along with new phasers, solenoids, timing chains, etc. $3k later it ran better but still had a rough idle and then intermittent misfire. Additionally the VCT solenoids I put in were aftermarket NTK and caused the PCM to go into the fritz throwing false cam phasing codes. Tore it down a second time with OEM and made sure timing was perfect. Codes went away but still had rough idling issues. For added fun the plastic coolant T/rad hose failed, spewing coolant (always replace these if you mess with it).
Rough idle can also be caused by a failed intake manifold runner, evap, crank sensor, throttle body, etc but the logs checked out. My approach may have been incorrect with guessing and using the parts cannon but I'm not a pro mechanic. Considering there was some metal in the oil from the start..the engine was already compromised and I was gambling.
I finally threw in the towel. Sure after that much you may think why not keep going but It quickly turned into something I couldn't rely on.
They are awesome cars in general I just happened to get one as a lemon.
I'm not going to say they're bad and you shouldn't buy one. Just have due diligence, know it's history and check data logs before committing. Seemingly, a rough idling gen 3 is fairly common, search the forums and you'll see. Ford has had a history with timing component issues and the coyote is no exception. My patience simply ran dry and sold it. Best of luck to you all.
Nevertheless, shortly after owning it stalled at stops/in traffic and rough idle with no codes. Figured it was a vac leak or VCT solenoids so I tore into it and discovered premature camshaft wear on the lobes/followers on left bank with some metal in oil. Cause? Undetermined. (Car had a perfect oil change history and the engine was perfectly clean on the inside). This is rare, one other forum member has a thread on this.
More details here: https://www.mustang6g.com/forums/threads/abnormal-camshaft-lobe-wear.209347/
Anyways, replaced cams along with new phasers, solenoids, timing chains, etc. $3k later it ran better but still had a rough idle and then intermittent misfire. Additionally the VCT solenoids I put in were aftermarket NTK and caused the PCM to go into the fritz throwing false cam phasing codes. Tore it down a second time with OEM and made sure timing was perfect. Codes went away but still had rough idling issues. For added fun the plastic coolant T/rad hose failed, spewing coolant (always replace these if you mess with it).
Rough idle can also be caused by a failed intake manifold runner, evap, crank sensor, throttle body, etc but the logs checked out. My approach may have been incorrect with guessing and using the parts cannon but I'm not a pro mechanic. Considering there was some metal in the oil from the start..the engine was already compromised and I was gambling.
I finally threw in the towel. Sure after that much you may think why not keep going but It quickly turned into something I couldn't rely on.
They are awesome cars in general I just happened to get one as a lemon.
I'm not going to say they're bad and you shouldn't buy one. Just have due diligence, know it's history and check data logs before committing. Seemingly, a rough idling gen 3 is fairly common, search the forums and you'll see. Ford has had a history with timing component issues and the coyote is no exception. My patience simply ran dry and sold it. Best of luck to you all.
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