cosmo
Well-Known Member
What's an acceptable amount of engine failures in your opinion then? You're speaking as if you have one in mind, 0%? That isn't realistic, even with today's manufacturing standards. V6s have blown up, GTs have blown up, we know at least one 350 blew up. Put those engines in a high gear at passing speed and floor it, see how much the engine likes it. The Ecoboost family has been out since 2009, and the I4s have been out since 2010. How long until these issues are exactly widespread as you say?I thought I remembered seeing more than six on this forum, and I've heard of a few just from word of mouth that aren't on the forums too. I can accept modified cars blowing up, but when stock cars are doing it too, you know there's something wrong. The whole LSPI issue is crazy. If every manufacturer is going to be turbocharging their cars for more efficiency now (at least the base and eco models) then they better make a car that can handling anything the stock motor can dish out in any gear. Imagine how many secretaries and other non-enthusiasts buy the ecoboost. Even the automatic doesn't downshift fast enough to avoid LSPI. You can't put a fragile motor that has all these rules attached to how you drive it in a car and sell it as a car for the masses. I think it's only a matter of time before these ecoboost issues become much more widespread.
Every Ecoboost owner should think long and hard about whether they can accept the risks before they mod. In my opinion, if you don't have 7 grand under your mattress for a new motor, don't mod it. I wish I would have known all this a year ago when I started modding mine. Unfortunately my ECU is now permanently scarred from the tune and it's too late to go back. Sadly, mine is now be a garage queen that goes out once or twice every few weeks to preserve it until I can upgrade to a GT.
And sure you can sell a LSPI prone engine to the masses, literally every company does it nowadays. Every DI engine has issues with oil ingestion as well. Volkswagen has WORSE oil ingestion issues, look at the GTIs and the Audis. Look at the grandfather of the 2.3 Ford, the Mazdaspeed3. Same problems. Any DI engine is prone to LSPI, turbocharging enhances that risk. Buying a vehicle and claiming ignorance isn't a valid excuse. Modding a vehicle and claiming ignorance isn't a valid excuse. You pay to play. If your stock vehicle pops, you're fine. If your modded vehicle pops, well, you took the risk. Own up to it.
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