2005 ford 6.0 diesal problems

   / 2005 ford 6.0 diesal problems #11  
Ford should recall all 6 & 6.4L diesels and fix them all.
There's no reason people like me should pay this much hard earned money for an unreliable truck!
 
   / 2005 ford 6.0 diesal problems #12  
I owned an 04 F350 6.0 that I purchased in 07 with 100,000 km on it and just got rid of it at 370,000 km when the head gaskets went for the second time two weeks ago. Once I had the truck, synthetic oil was changed every 8,000 km, fuel filters every 24,000 and all scheduled maintenance was done. Despite these expenses, it was the most unreliable and expensive to operate vehicle I have ever owned.

It had already had the EGR cooler and turbo replaced under warranty when I bought it but the EGR cooler failed again at 150,000 km and after it was replaced I still had a coolant leak so just before the end of the 160,000 km warranty the heads were removed and the gaskets replaced. I tried to get ARP head studs installed at that time but my dealer service manager (he has since been let go) refused to install them because Ford was paying for the head gasket job. The alternator failed a few thousand kilometers later and FYI there is no warning light or other indication that there is a problem. First the radio and instrumentation stopped working, a few minutes later the power windows and locks quit and withing ten minutes the F350 was dead on the shoulder. At 240,000 km the EGR cooler failed again and rather then spend $4,000 to replace it I put the truck on a trailer and towed it to River City Diesel. They are great guys and in one day they deleted the EGR cooler, replaced the oil cooler, replaced the factory down pipe, installed boost, EGT and trans temp gauges, installed a new 4" exhaust system front to back, a coolant filter with fresh coolant and an SCT tuner.

The truck ran better than ever for about a year and then the FICM went and a few months later I had a rough idle at start up which was diagnosed as being two bad fuel injectors - one on each bank. In August of 2011 at 320,000 km I made a deal with the dealer to replace all 8 injectors at the same time due to the mileage on the truck and the labour cost in getting at the injectors. During the injector replacement they discovered some pin hole leaks in the rad so I had it replaced and the coolant changed. The intention was to get another 150,000 km and three years out of the truck so I could trade my Kubota B26 and upgrade to an L45. The truck ran fine through the winter so in April I upgraded to the Kubota L45.

The truck continued to run fine until about 350,000 km when I noticed that the auxiliary cooling fan was running more often and under lighter loads than it should. I took it in to have the clutch fan replaced and they reported that I had a 30 degree difference between my coolant and engine oil temperature also so despite having a coolant filter in place for 110,000 kms the oil cooler had to be replaced again. Less than a month later lower power was traced to a failing HPOP (High Pressure Oil Pump) so that had to be replaced. I took the truck in at 368,000 for an oil change, brake job and inspection sticker plus a slow coolant leak. It turns out despite all the times the coolant had been changed in my engine the front cover had corroded so that had to be replaced. I drove the truck for four days after this work was done and going up a hill the engine started to vibrate and when I pulled to the shoulder I could tell it wasn't firing on all eight cylinders. The diagnosis the next day was head gasket blown on number three and $4,500 to do the head gaskets. Having spent $7,000 since May, I decided to stop the financial bleeding and get a new truck.

I have driven exclusively Chevy and GMC trucks since 1976 and I don't think all of their repair bills totaled together would equal the repair costs of my 6.0 litre F350 and have put 300,000 km or more on a couple of my GM products. That being said, when it ran well the F350 was a great truck for towing and hauling heavy loads which I have done a lot of over the last few years. I went shopping for a replacement truck and I looked at Dodge and GM but in the end I have purchased a new 2012 F250. I wanted an F350 but no crew cab long boxes were left so I purchased an F250 and will upgrade the rear springs. I wanted to keep my costs down but I too have heard horror stories about the cost of servicing out of warranty 6.4 litre engines and so far the 6.7 seems to be a good motor. I can tell you with less than 600 km on the odometer it is head and shoulders above my 04 F350 in terms of comfort, performance and towing ability in stock form. Hopefully it will prove to be reliable over the long haul but as others have suggested, unless you can do a lot of your own work and don't mind riding in tow trucks buy the extended warranty for your 6.0 or 6.4 or trade them before the warranty expires.

Regards,

Lauren
 
   / 2005 ford 6.0 diesal problems #13  
Geeze. I hope you have better luck.
Wish we had more choices. Competition would force them to do better by their customers.
I recognize that Ford took no bailout money, but reluctant to give them more of my hard earned money if they keep turning out unreliable $60,000 diesel trucks.
There's no excuse for it. They've had decades to make these trucks the way they should be made.
 
   / 2005 ford 6.0 diesal problems #14  
I blame a lot of the problems with these trucks on the government. The majority of these problems are due to the emissions junk.
 
   / 2005 ford 6.0 diesal problems #15  
Lauren, I hear what you are saying. I loved mine (the 6.0) when I first got it. Awesome on fuel and tons of power. But right to the day the warranty ran out (160,000 km's).....it started with injectors and kept on going. And I also do maintenance at HALF the recommended intervals and it was stock, no programmers....nothing.
I've come to name it BOHICA (Bend Over Here It Comes Again.) It's pretty sad when the service manager at my Ford dealer says "get rid of it because no matter what you do it is never going to end." LOL. Only problem is, I tried selling it with no luck and they don't want to give you anything for them on trade in.

And yes, if your alternator goes or you continue to run them with weak batteries, they will take out the FICM, which will either show up as injector codes, or just not start.

Now I'm even scared of the new Ford built 6.7's. Some guys swear by them, but there are still tons of horror stories.
 
   / 2005 ford 6.0 diesal problems #16  
I keep seeing a commercial on tv from a lawyer who is suing Ford over these Powerstrokes. Wonder how that is going? LOL.
I'll bet the only one who is making any money is that lawyer, LOL.
 
   / 2005 ford 6.0 diesal problems #17  
The best fuel in this country is not as clean as the worst fuel in Europe.
 
   / 2005 ford 6.0 diesal problems #18  
I blame a lot of the problems with these trucks on the government. The majority of these problems are due to the emissions junk.

A contributing factor, yes, but then don't make us pay for them out of warranty when emissions problems make them break. Extend the warranties to 10yrs 200K on the motor.
If we have to be guinea pigs, give us protection.
Even when my Ford truck IS covered by warranty, what about the hassle of dropping my truck off to the service dept for 2,3,4 days? What if it breaks while hauling a machine on a trailer?

Everyone thinks warranties are so unbelievably wonderful, but even when covered under warranty, the customer, especially the commercial customer, is still incredibly inconvenienced.
 
   / 2005 ford 6.0 diesal problems #19  
I keep seeing a commercial on tv from a lawyer who is suing Ford over these Powerstrokes. Wonder how that is going? LOL.
I'll bet the only one who is making any money is that lawyer, LOL.

Ford would do their reputation an incredible amount of good if they'd fix the trucks so they don't break in the first place. I bet they know every weakness in the 6L and the 6.4L.
Just bring 'em in and fix them.
I know they won't because they'd lose millions in extended warranty sales.
 
   / 2005 ford 6.0 diesal problems
  • Thread Starter
#20  
My buddy got his truck back. Egr delete, a programmer, can't remember the name bt I believe its 3 letters, supposed to be the best. No head gasket problems, iol cooler or injector issues.
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

2025 CFG Industrial MX20R (A50123)
2025 CFG...
2012 Honda Accord LX Sedan (A51694)
2012 Honda Accord...
2003 Big Tex 10PI 16ft. T/A Pipe Top Utility Trailer (A52377)
2003 Big Tex 10PI...
2021 Kubota RTV-X1140RL-A (A47384)
2021 Kubota...
2022 Chevrolet Tahoe FL SUV (A51694)
2022 Chevrolet...
2004 Wabash National 28ft Dry Van Trailer (A51692)
2004 Wabash...
 
Top