dmac
Active member
I don't know if I've seen a single unhappy 5.0L owner on this forum, which says something.
Super reliable, great mpg, great noises (even in stock form no exhaust), great power, best mpg while towing....
Not 1 single issue I've seen on the internet related to Cylinder deactivation or the wet Kevlar belt since introduction 2021.
The 2.7L is probably the next best engine in terms of reliability (I've seen 1 or 2 reports of phaser issues but that's basically nothing - they sell a ton of 2.7s). The 3.5L ecoboost has also been rock solid since 2021 (2017 - 2020 were NIGHTMARE's with failing phasers and cracking valve covers, both have since been fixed).
My opinion is if you want heavy towing/more power get the 5.0, more mpg -> get the 2.7L.
Don't mess with the Hybrid unless you want the generator or will only use it for light work (it has lower payload and drives heavier w/ the battery) and will sell after warranty (this will piss off some people sorry).
The 10 speed is really the weak point of the trucks, but since 2023, the CDF drum has been fixed, so full rebuilds are extremely rare AFAIK.
The Valve body probably is the weakest link now, but that's pretty easy to upgrade/change out if you want via a Sonnax Zip or Nexgen kit.
Additionally, the 10r80 seems to respond very well to livernois tuning in regards to driveability and performance.
Ford is unique in that is offers 3 state of the art, extremely reliable motors on the F150 now. Ford is nowhere near perfect, but I don't think any other truck OEM can say this.
Super reliable, great mpg, great noises (even in stock form no exhaust), great power, best mpg while towing....
Not 1 single issue I've seen on the internet related to Cylinder deactivation or the wet Kevlar belt since introduction 2021.
The 2.7L is probably the next best engine in terms of reliability (I've seen 1 or 2 reports of phaser issues but that's basically nothing - they sell a ton of 2.7s). The 3.5L ecoboost has also been rock solid since 2021 (2017 - 2020 were NIGHTMARE's with failing phasers and cracking valve covers, both have since been fixed).
My opinion is if you want heavy towing/more power get the 5.0, more mpg -> get the 2.7L.
Don't mess with the Hybrid unless you want the generator or will only use it for light work (it has lower payload and drives heavier w/ the battery) and will sell after warranty (this will piss off some people sorry).
The 10 speed is really the weak point of the trucks, but since 2023, the CDF drum has been fixed, so full rebuilds are extremely rare AFAIK.
The Valve body probably is the weakest link now, but that's pretty easy to upgrade/change out if you want via a Sonnax Zip or Nexgen kit.
Additionally, the 10r80 seems to respond very well to livernois tuning in regards to driveability and performance.
Ford is unique in that is offers 3 state of the art, extremely reliable motors on the F150 now. Ford is nowhere near perfect, but I don't think any other truck OEM can say this.
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