Anyone own a 2004-05 Ford 5.4L in F150, Expedition or Navigator? Had to have a tune-up done?
Ford has come up with a new "better idea." A lot of shops that I call on refuse to do a tune up on these vehicles - they send them back to the dealer with the nightmare of the potential problems.
What has Ford done? In these applications they are using a special shielded electrode spark plug that has a nasty habit of breaking in the head. Ford has now even designed a special tool that cuts into the broken shield and makes it so it can be removed - sometimes. The bottom line - about 10% of the time a tune-up means removing the head to get the broken parts out of the cylinder. (And if you are really lucky with a broken one on both sides, both heads.)
Anyone have access to the AllData shop data-base - check it out!
No, I don't own one. But if I did and found out about this, I would be tempted to dump the vehicle before doing a tune-up.
Wasn't terrible at a state park beach. Antelope island maybe. I wouldn't recommend it as a beach destination tho. Figured I was there, I'm getting in it.
The water looked and smelled disgusting with hundreds of thousands of birds sh*tting in there. About as gross as the Salton Sea. When I duck hunted there I didn't even want to touch the water.
It's kinda gross with the algae in the summer but I got in it anyway. Wanted to see the increased bouyancy at work. You can kinda tuck yourself into a ball and you'll just float with your head above water. When dry off you look diamond encrusted with the salt.
We went to the flats too. I dipped a tire on the rental car onto it just to say I’ve been there,but it was still pretty soft from winter melt. After seeing some moron in a BMW suv get dragged out of the muck I had no intention of repeating his stupidity.
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theoilman
Anyone own a 2004-05 Ford 5.4L in F150, Expedition or Navigator? Had to have a tune-up done?
Ford has come up with a new "better idea." A lot of shops that I call on refuse to do a tune up on these vehicles - they send them back to the dealer with the nightmare of the potential problems.
What has Ford done? In these applications they are using a special shielded electrode spark plug that has a nasty habit of breaking in the head. Ford has now even designed a special tool that cuts into the broken shield and makes it so it can be removed - sometimes. The bottom line - about 10% of the time a tune-up means removing the head to get the broken parts out of the cylinder. (And if you are really lucky with a broken one on both sides, both heads.)
Anyone have access to the AllData shop data-base - check it out!
No, I don't own one. But if I did and found out about this, I would be tempted to dump the vehicle before doing a tune-up.
airjer, what are your thoughts on this?
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