For passenger cars and also for the heavy equipment I operate for work, I have kept a hard rule up until this point of staying away from any post-2006 diesel equipment with aftertreatment systems. Especially those engines that are notorious for trouble.
However, I recently had a vocational truck come available to me that was such a good deal that it didn't make sense not to buy it. It is a 2017 International TerraStar (small medium duty truck comparable in size to a Ford F-550) with the infamous MaxxForce 7 engine. This engine is a close relative of the 6.4L Powerstroke used by Ford from 08-10. It has a terrible reputation in the Fords and equally bad in what I am able to read and hear from heavy truck owners.
I bought this truck knowing I might need to abandon the engine and chassis and transfer the vocational equipment installed on it to a different platform. I got it cheap enough that I can do that and still be looking good in terms of value, so that is the default plan (likely would find a clean older IH 4300 chassis with DT466E since that is what we run in most of our other trucks of this size and they have been great).
However::::::: this TerraStar with the MF7 actually fires right up and runs well. Engine has a Navistar factory reman tag on it, so it's had a motor already at some point, no idea when, but not too surprising given the known extreme short lifespan of this engine. 160k miles on the whole truck, which is a lot for the MF motor hence the replacement I assume, but no challenge for the Allison trans or other components, so probably plenty of life left in the rest of it. California truck, cab is clean, body is good, the PTO system works well, interior functions are all working, glass and rubber are even good. Transmission works well and the whole setup is pretty nice. It would need some rear brake work to hit the road, but that is standard cheap Ford F-series parts so no big deal there.
The engine starts easy, and runs nice and smooth. So now I am of course tempted to explore the question: is there still some life to be gotten out of this truck as-is?
It is missing the DPF -- DP sensor tubes and temp sensors are hanging there so it looks like one could be reinstalled, but they are $$$ and known troublesome, no doubt there is a good reason it's off of there now. I understand that there are alternatives out there to reinstalling it (even today, confirmed it). Those alternatives are expensive but not too much more than the cost of a new DPF, and would stop EGR operation as well. One way or the other I would have to put a few grand in to go one of those two directions right off the bat, since for now it has codes and derates of course with the missing aftertreatment. Luckily or unluckily this engine was part of Navistar's failed attempt to meet EPA2010 regs without SCR ("Advanced EGR" ), so it has none of those items to deal with. With EGR disabled and DPF eliminated it would be a "fairly simple" configuration -- although still HPCR injection with a high pressure pump that is known troublesome, etc....
SO -- in case there is anyone here who has some firsthand feel for this engine and can give some input -- here is the key question I have at this point. If I go ahead with emissions defeat on this engine, what kind of reliability and life can I reasonably expect from it? Can they last for a reasonable lifespan and be depended on?
The three paths I have right now are as follows.
1) Put in the necessary work to get the truck on the road w/o EGR or aftertreatment as-is, and then run it for whatever life I can get from it, hopefully for a number of years and miles.
2) Remove vocational equipment from this chassis and swap to another chassis, then scrap this chassis even though it seems to run pretty good.
3) Swap a different engine into the TerraStar chassis (Cummins fits, probably could figure out some options with a T444E or some kind of gasser as well).
If it is feasible then I would be tempted by #1, knowing that the other two options would still be possible down the road if the MF7 had a major failure. But maybe someone will tell me that it makes no sense to even put a dime into this engine, and get rid of it while I can. It may have value as a running used engine.
Appreciate any thoughts from those who know this motor. TIA!
However, I recently had a vocational truck come available to me that was such a good deal that it didn't make sense not to buy it. It is a 2017 International TerraStar (small medium duty truck comparable in size to a Ford F-550) with the infamous MaxxForce 7 engine. This engine is a close relative of the 6.4L Powerstroke used by Ford from 08-10. It has a terrible reputation in the Fords and equally bad in what I am able to read and hear from heavy truck owners.
I bought this truck knowing I might need to abandon the engine and chassis and transfer the vocational equipment installed on it to a different platform. I got it cheap enough that I can do that and still be looking good in terms of value, so that is the default plan (likely would find a clean older IH 4300 chassis with DT466E since that is what we run in most of our other trucks of this size and they have been great).
However::::::: this TerraStar with the MF7 actually fires right up and runs well. Engine has a Navistar factory reman tag on it, so it's had a motor already at some point, no idea when, but not too surprising given the known extreme short lifespan of this engine. 160k miles on the whole truck, which is a lot for the MF motor hence the replacement I assume, but no challenge for the Allison trans or other components, so probably plenty of life left in the rest of it. California truck, cab is clean, body is good, the PTO system works well, interior functions are all working, glass and rubber are even good. Transmission works well and the whole setup is pretty nice. It would need some rear brake work to hit the road, but that is standard cheap Ford F-series parts so no big deal there.
The engine starts easy, and runs nice and smooth. So now I am of course tempted to explore the question: is there still some life to be gotten out of this truck as-is?
It is missing the DPF -- DP sensor tubes and temp sensors are hanging there so it looks like one could be reinstalled, but they are $$$ and known troublesome, no doubt there is a good reason it's off of there now. I understand that there are alternatives out there to reinstalling it (even today, confirmed it). Those alternatives are expensive but not too much more than the cost of a new DPF, and would stop EGR operation as well. One way or the other I would have to put a few grand in to go one of those two directions right off the bat, since for now it has codes and derates of course with the missing aftertreatment. Luckily or unluckily this engine was part of Navistar's failed attempt to meet EPA2010 regs without SCR ("Advanced EGR" ), so it has none of those items to deal with. With EGR disabled and DPF eliminated it would be a "fairly simple" configuration -- although still HPCR injection with a high pressure pump that is known troublesome, etc....
SO -- in case there is anyone here who has some firsthand feel for this engine and can give some input -- here is the key question I have at this point. If I go ahead with emissions defeat on this engine, what kind of reliability and life can I reasonably expect from it? Can they last for a reasonable lifespan and be depended on?
The three paths I have right now are as follows.
1) Put in the necessary work to get the truck on the road w/o EGR or aftertreatment as-is, and then run it for whatever life I can get from it, hopefully for a number of years and miles.
2) Remove vocational equipment from this chassis and swap to another chassis, then scrap this chassis even though it seems to run pretty good.
3) Swap a different engine into the TerraStar chassis (Cummins fits, probably could figure out some options with a T444E or some kind of gasser as well).
If it is feasible then I would be tempted by #1, knowing that the other two options would still be possible down the road if the MF7 had a major failure. But maybe someone will tell me that it makes no sense to even put a dime into this engine, and get rid of it while I can. It may have value as a running used engine.
Appreciate any thoughts from those who know this motor. TIA!