So toggling back and forth from 4H to 2H fixed it, "according to the dealer," lol?Yup. My dealer replaced my left front IWE at 400 miles and it persists. I would say that the noise at 45 MPH after shifting out of 4H lasts a much shorter amount of time now. I took it back and…
![]()
Lol wow now thats some troubleshooting. My truck did this a couple times going from 4h to 2h. Thought it was just because it didn't like the dry pavement (switched on it's own going to tow mode accidentally instead of sport) but it seems like it doesnt matter. Really wish 4H wouldnt engage in certain drive modes on its own.So toggling back and forth from 4H to 2H fixed it, "according to the dealer," lol?
It is replicable. Have them shift in to 4H, let everything engage, then shift back to 2H and wait about 30-60 seconds and you should hear it.Iv had me 2023 FX4 3.5 for 2 months and have just over 3000KM. I heard this exact noise first time yesterday morning and also this morning. Exact same spot after making a left at a light, 5 mins into drive and lasted maybe 20-30 seconds. I am in Ontario so we are just now experiencing colder weather with past 2 mornings at -5 Celsius. first time I pulled over right away to check tire as it sounded like something was rubbing hard as described by others on here.
This thread is great and full of info that I will gather up and track to take to dealer. Ill make sure its documented with them as I'm sure they wont be able to replicate as they never can with any issues.
Thanks for that info, I will try this myself so I can hopefully show them.It is replicable. Have them shift in to 4H, let everything engage, then shift back to 2H and wait about 30-60 seconds and you should hear it.
The reason it does it when it’s cold is to warm up the front differential fluid. It’s not engaging the transfer case, just the hubs so the half shafts spin the differential. I believe it is distance based so it makes sense that it’s happening at the same spot.
That’s what the dealership did for mine and I regret it because I think the new IWE makes more noise and lasts longer than the old one. Mine was replaced this past March and when they test drove it they still heard it so they then also changed the wheel bearing. That supposedly solved the noise per the work order but I can reproduce the noise by shifting from 4H to 2H without fail. I’ve decided to just let it ride because I don’t think replacing the IWE again is going to solve anything.Thanks for that info, I will try this myself so I can hopefully show them.
Is the fix just to replace the unit then?
annoying system. I guess periodic noise is better than all the time. I will take in so to have it documented but probably let er go, don't see point in replacing new parts with new parts that are still crap.That’s what the dealership did for mine and I regret it because I think the new IWE makes more noise and lasts longer than the old one. Mine was replaced this past March and when they test drove it they still heard it so they then also changed the wheel bearing. That supposedly solved the noise per the work order but I can reproduce the noise by shifting from 4H to 2H without fail. I’ve decided to just let it ride because I don’t think replacing the IWE again is going to solve anything.
I don’t think it’s a problem with engaging, rather disengaging. I’ve only noticed it going from 4H to 2H. 2H to 4H is pretty smooth and I’ve never heard them engage when it’s cold in the morning, you only hear after driving the set distance and they disengage.In my opinion if the pcm commands the IWE to engage, and it did engage FULLY, it would not result in the noise/vibration described.
And the whole point of Ford finally moving away from vacuum actuated IWE was to eliminate the infamous "partial" engagement of the IWE. With the stepper motor, it should be far more reliable regarding engagement.
Makes no sense that Ford is struggling with this. At least not to my layman understanding.