HammaMan
Well-known member
Well plastic isn't just used because it's cheap. If something gets up in there since it's a truck and all, they want the $8 plastic to break, not the $1000 heat exchanger. Weak links are intentionally engineered in. Sometimes they're a little too weak.I agree, but in general hoses are relatively reliable unless injured in some way (e.g. shredded by a fan). The hoses are close to the exhaust, but could be tucked farther away if not connected. The connectors and the U-joint is my biggest concern. I think that both coolant hoses are SAE Quick Release fuel fittings, which means that a part to shunt between them could be quick release fittings on both ends. I.e. the shunt is itself a quick release part and thus easy to replace for whatever reason. If I use aluminum fittings, then the likelihood of failure drops to a very low number.
Here's the end of their run on that vid -- had screenshot'd earlier and left it. Engine is hotter than the trans here. That fuel burn is nuts though. Trans looks to be ~3/4 like fuel. Coolant is 7/8s there. Not fond of ford's gear logic. It should have used higher RPMs instead of maxing boost using the lower to mid 4k RPM. Ford's tow haul logic isn't very smart. It's always favoring lower RPMs over practical usage causing a lot people to lock out 9 / 10 manually. Some even report better towing in normal mode w/ manual gear lockout.
Sponsored
Last edited: