Steve Addy
Top Post Dawg
I will say that the 5.4L is a bucket of ****e though....
Steve
Steve
I never replace a WP before it fails on these, since it's not driven by the TB I don't see any reason to do it before failure. And I have had newly installed pumps that have failed too.I think my head parts are coming from ID Parts either today or tomorrow. Either way, I decided to use my free time to go ahead and swap the water pump and thermostat since they've been in there for 120k already. Honestly I really feel like they could have very safely made it to 180k. The water pump still felt nice and snug - not as much as the new one, obviously, but nowhere near worn out.
You're saying you can replace the water pump without disturbing the timing belt? I can't say I've tried to figure out the dynamics of that, but you do have to remove the bottom plastic cover that goes around the crank gear and the big aluminum pulley to access some of those bolts. I'm not saying it can't be done (because clearly you can lol) but it seems like it would be a hell of a job for sure. I was 5k away from my next timing belt change so I decided to go ahead and change it all since it was already torn down.I never replace a WP before it fails on these, since it's not driven by the TB I don't see any reason to do it before failure. And I have had newly installed pumps that have failed too.
Since you can replace it without disturbing the TB I see no reason to do it early, but that's just me.
Steve
Pull the alternator and detach and move the AC compressor out of your way and pull the bracket for those two and the WP housing is right there in front of you. Remove the nut from the T bolt, clamp the lower rad hose and pull the slip joint with the lower elbow, pull the WP housing mounting bolts (WP pulley too) and the whole thing can come out as a unit. This also lets you replace the housing to block o-ring and to the new t-stat outside the car (and upside down) so there's no struggle centering the stat in the opening.You're saying you can replace the water pump without disturbing the timing belt? I can't say I've tried to figure out the dynamics of that, but you do have to remove the bottom plastic cover that goes around the crank gear and the big aluminum pulley to access some of those bolts. I'm not saying it can't be done (because clearly you can lol) but it seems like it would be a hell of a job for sure. I was 5k away from my next timing belt change so I decided to go ahead and change it all since it was already torn down.
Eh, maybe you mean the 3 valve 5.4L with endless valvetrain problems? I understand those are trouble from what I hear, but I have to say the old 2 valve 5.4L engines have always been absolute workhorses for me. I have had 4 of them including one currently, plus a 6.8L 2 valve in an F-450 in the fleet.... All have been rock solid reliable trucks and engines, all they want to do is run hard. They never leak, are happy to spin 5000 rpm for hours at a time, and are almost maintenance free. 300k plus miles no trouble with them. Get the plugs torqued right to avoid stripping the heads, and probably need one set of coil packs at some point, otherwise they are pretty bombproof, plus powerful and quiet. I think they are one of the more underappreciated engines of the last 30 years, though the upside to that is you can get a 5.4L or V10 truck for a fraction of what a (noisy, leaky) 7.3L Powerstroke equivalent would sell for.I will say that the 5.4L is a bucket of ****e though....
Steve
Yep this was exactly my method for doing a WP outdoors in a snowstorm a few winters ago on my B4. Works fine and was less of a fight than I had expected plus gives you a chance to replace the big O-ring where the housing meets the block. Similar reasons for me too, I had done the TB earlier that year.... nothing sucks up your enthusiasm like disassembling work you just did. Of course later that same winter the intermediate shaft seal tore itself to pieces on a -25F cold start, so I ended up back in the TB side of the motor again anyway....Pull the alternator and detach and move the AC compressor out of your way and pull the bracket for those two and the WP housing is right there in front of you. Remove the nut from the T bolt, clamp the lower rad hose and pull the slip joint with the lower elbow, pull the WP housing mounting bolts (WP pulley too) and the whole thing can come out as a unit. This also lets you replace the housing to block o-ring and to the new t-stat outside the car (and upside down) so there's no struggle centering the stat in the opening.
A little blue thread locker on the WP housing bolts and you should be good for a reinstall, since they aren't TTY bolts I see no reason to replace them.
This is how you avoid disrupting the TB with a WP change.
I figured this out when I replaced the WP at the TB change once and it leaked after a few days on the road...I was bound and determined not to have to undo all that work just to get that thing replaced.
And as much as these early (old) engines probably aren't as refined as the ALH and beyond, at least if my WP fails it doesn't take out my timing belt (or engine) in the process.
Steve
Interesting on that. I wonder if Ford's original 5W20 spec was part of the problem to begin with? All of our Tritons get Mobil 1 0W40 year round just because.... I have had folks laugh at me for using such fancy stuff in a beater Ford pickup motor, but hey, they seem almost immune to wear when running this stuff, even if the engine is getting a major workout every day.Thicker oil, however, seems to work pretty well in them. An old school band-aid, but it works.
I’ve done several. Faster to do it this way, than to involve the TB. AC compressor has enough slack to rest it somewhere without disconnecting the hoses.You're saying you can replace the water pump without disturbing the timing belt?
Somewhere I read something similar about the Ford Triton and Modular motors where 5W20 became the spec at some point for US models.... yet the same engines in Australian market vehicles continued to call for the original 5W30 spec. Granted they see more consistently hot ambient conditions down there, but the bottom line is as you say, the reason for the thinner oil spec in the US obviously was not with the engine's benefit in mind, but rather some fuel economy goal.Toyota has 0w16 now. But that same Camry in Mexico? Nah, you can go ahead and put 5w30 in there, it's fine. Pretty sure the same environment exists in El Paso, Texas as exists across the border in Chihuahua![]()
Guess that's one of the few actual differences between the two, then. lol1Z came with 8mm AHU came with 7mm
You lost me… you never stated what engine this is, but being in a B4, I’d assume 1Z with 8mm valves? Are you going to 7mm valves? This would be an upgrade, but I believe new seats will need to be installed.The one thing I DID find in the manual is that the guides need to be reamed with a 7mm reamer.
It seems I have an AHU and not a 1Z, because I double checked and did indeed already have 7mm valves.You lost me… you never stated what engine this is, but being in a B4, I’d assume 1Z with 8mm valves? Are you going to 7mm valves? This would be an upgrade, but I believe new seats will need to be installed.
Check your block for engine ID, if it's 1Z and you have a 7mm head then it's been replaced already. If it's AHU then your engine has been replaced.It seems I have an AHU and not a 1Z, because I double checked and did indeed already have 7mm valves.
I'm just OCD like that. lol Somebody gave me a hint of doubt and I couldn't help but look while I was here.Not sure why you are messing with the bottom end with the problem is in the top end. ?????
See post #54.