BreadBurner
Active Member
- Joined
- Aug 12, 2022
- Threads
- 0
- Messages
- 28
- Reaction score
- 11
- Location
- San Antonio, TX
- Vehicle(s)
- 2022 Mach 1 700A HP FJG, 2015-2017 Toyota Camry SE
OE?I have no data, but I'm convinced that a good number of the engine replacements are anchored around two issues. People that treat the car like a mini van and don't let it warm fully and end up with consumption issues and a 12:1 compression motor hoping and relying on the consistency of pump gasoline (with no direct injection protections).
Between oil consumption replacements and the inevitable engine failures (that even GM is seeing on their 12.5:1 motors) with knock and crappy pump 93, I think that accounts for a big chunk of the issues.
I think some lesser chunks of the issue are things like oil pump gears (which plagued all coyote variants, not just the voodoo), and things like the oil filter and oil pressure sensor backing off and dumping the oil and nuking the motor.
I'm betting if you take those out, there's probably a minority of things like valves dropping, etc.
Granted, you can do high compression on pump gas, IF you don't try to wring out the most power possible and you tune it conservatively. My personal opinion is that Ford's calibration relies on knock sensors, but not enough. It has caps on how much fuel the short term trims can adjust and it has caps on how much timing can be adjusted for KS activity, but Ford must have decided that there's a balance between engine protections and a bunch of frustrated owners who are getting engine codes and limp modes all the time for bad fuel. IN summary, I think the OE calibration should have been way more aggressive in it's protections. If you're motor is seeing markedly more knock than usual, IN MY OPINION, the calibration should either limit the driver or at least warn them (rather than just getting to the end of the adjustments with a sad face that the motor is smoked.)
I'd rather have a check engine light pop up to warn me that maybe that last batch of fuel isn't so great, take it easy.
Case in point is the TPMS system.
I recently avoided what might have been terrible, possibly even DEADLY. I had swapped out the rear set for my drag radial set and it was the first time taking them out this year. It was particularly cold (for us here) and I checked the pressure on all 4. I went to the gas station a couple miles away to fuel up and I was on my way to meet up with some friends and do some "Spirited" pulls.
LUCKILY, I wanted to check the tire pressure (being more concerned about the rear) and as I got out onto the boulevard and I was JUST merging, I noticed that one of my front tires was way lower than the other. "That's weird, what's going on." Then I watched it drop from 24 psi, 22 psi, 20 psi and thought, oh shit, I must have a leak. By the time I got to the first exit and waited at a stop light to get to a service station, it was down below 15 psi. The engine light didn't come on until it read below 14 psi.
Why oh WHY doesn't Ford have simple logic where if there's a noticeable change in a short period of time it WARNS the driver. Instead, it waited until things were so bad/obvious that by that time, on the front tire, I could have been sent into a crash? The inside sidewall had failed and was compromised and had I been doing excessive speed, it's likely it would have been a rapid failure.
My point is, Ford's protections are largely too reactionary and not proactive enough.
I'm on MOTEC now and the protections are wonderful. It doesn't wait for the oil pressure to bottom out before it says "hey man, we know it's way too late, but you've lost oil pressure." Or knock activity or all sorts of protections that are very proactive in that if it recognizes a significant/rapid change, it won't allow me to flog the motor. It goes into a reduced/limp mode, even if the input signal is quite all the way to "too low."
If you're going to run 12:1 compression and roll the dice on pump gasoline, you can't afford to be reactionary, especially if you're trying to get near the edge of max performance. Ford's protections are usually WAY too late to say "hey, looks like something is wrong here, take it easy till we figure this out." It runs to the end of fuel trims or KS adjustments and by then it may be sad faces all around.
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