pilotgore
Well-Known Member
It is metal, yes.Is the Ronin engagement metal? If so, reason number N to stick with Femco: plastic can't break anything on the car. Even if 100 to 1 or better odds, why take any chance.
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It is metal, yes.Is the Ronin engagement metal? If so, reason number N to stick with Femco: plastic can't break anything on the car. Even if 100 to 1 or better odds, why take any chance.
- Do you have any pics of the broken off nub?That’s now 5 that I’m aware of. Did you inspect the plastic nubs inside the oil pan to make sure they were intact?
After mine shot out on track (also safety wired) I bought a new plastic plug from the auto parts store, refilled with oil, and finished out my track weekend. When I was recounting the story to someone else at the track they asked if the nubs in the oil pan were ok. I told them they must be because the plastic plug was holding just fine.
When I did my post weekend oil change I decided to look inside the pan for sh*ts and giggles. To my horror I discovered that one of the nubs was completely broken off, and the other was damaged. How that plastic plug stayed in there for another 4 hours of track time is a miracle.
Unfortunately I didn’t take any pictures. One nub was completely sheered off. The other nub looked like it had be broken in half, with the top of the remaining nub not being smooth. The nubs aren’t very big, but it was definitely noticeable.- Do you have any pics of the broken off nub?
- Did you replace your oil pan?
Yup, this thread and a few others. The harmonics differences are the leading theory as to why it’s happening.I don’t recall where, but it has been discussed the differences/harmonics about using a metal plug in a plastic pan. Apparently the two don’t work well together. Novel idea, but…
Fumco however also imply the OEM is one-time only, or "temporary" as they say:Zero. Different aftermarket plugs simply offer a cleaner solution to draining oil from the pan.
There was a long floated rumor going around that the plastic plugs were single use only. However, after ALOT of searching, it turns out the only place that says the plastic plugs are single use is on the Ronin website where it’s used as a selling point. Ford specifically tells techs to inspect the plug and reinstall.
If you're still within warranty and you track the car, I'd definitely switch back to the factory plug. Knowing what I know now, the juice isn't worth the squeeze.Fumco however also imply the OEM is one-time only, or "temporary" as they say:
"the temporary plastic yellow OEM plug in your Ford": https://www.femco.com/product/ford-oil-plug/
I'd trust what Ford says a lot more though, so if they say install after inspection, that should be good enough for anyone.
The ford tech's I'm friends with say they've only replaced a few in the years they've been there, and it was always due to bad O-ring's (which makes sense.)Fumco however also imply the OEM is one-time only, or "temporary" as they say:
"the temporary plastic yellow OEM plug in your Ford": https://www.femco.com/product/ford-oil-plug/
I'd trust what Ford says a lot more though, so if they say install after inspection, that should be good enough for anyone.
You’ll probably be fine but who knows. I had mine in for 6,000 miles (4,000 track miles) before it was ejected. Seems it happens to everyone when near redline, going into a big braking zone, then downshifting. From the video of mine happening, the plug popped out at the exact moment of the downshift. I’ve posted it a few times before but here it is again as viewed by the Camaro I was passing.I may go back to a plastic plug, y'all making me nervous. I had Zero issues with a Ronin on my Gen 3 Coyote F150 in 100k miles, changed every 5k like clockwork. Have had the Ronin in my Mustang for 4k so far, will be doing the first change soon. I don't ever do track days though, I wind it out at least once every drive but don't push my car hard at all so I might be OK..
Main reason I had it on my F150 was the oil stream hit the sway bar and made a HUGE mess when draining, there isn't any obstruction on the Mustang so not a big deal on it. I've got a big long pan so catching the oil isn't a big deal, plus I don't change my oil on it that often. I was changing the oil in my F150 every 2 months for a while![]()
Is the Ronin engagement metal? If so, reason number N to stick with Femco: plastic can't break anything on the car. Even if 100 to 1 or better odds, why take any chance.
That was my question also (metal), watching the install video you can see the pressure being applied to get that plug installed.It is metal, yes.
I don’t have a weight, but not very heavy. Definitely more than stock, but it’s not significant.How heavy is the Ronin plug??
As the plastic pan heats up it becomes much more flexible and perhaps the sheer weight of the Ronin plug causes damage from flexing vibrations??