Journey with Confidence RV GPS App RV Trip Planner RV LIFE Campground Reviews RV Maintenance Take a Speed Test Free 7 Day Trial ×
 


Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
 
Old 04-30-2014, 12:17 PM   #11
Senior Member
 
E350's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Sacramento Delta, CA
Posts: 1,024
Re: reliability of old 7.3 engines pre Powerstroke. (1990-1

carringb: Thanks! (This is why everyone should take what I say with a few grains of salt...)

Copes: I like everything about the looks of your rig except the tow mirrors. They are simply door denters. I think JWA or someone else here has done an upgrade to the pull out extendable towing mirrors. Personally, that is the probably the only thing which I would change.

Except for having John Wood rebuild and install your transmission when your E4OD (like my 4R100) will eventually go out.

__________________
2002 E350 ext.; 160K; 7.3L; 4R100 (w/4x4 deep pan & filter); 4x4 conv. w/2007 F250/F350 coil frnt axle (oppos. dual Bilstein press. shocks cured DW) diff chg from 3.55 to 3.73 (bad!); BW1356 t.c. (bad!); LT265/70R17/E Michelin LTX M/S2; Engel MT60 Combi Fridge-Freezer; 4 BP 380J pv panels; Auragen 5kw AC gen. in top alt. position; Webasto Dual-Top; Voyager top. 1995 5.8L EB Bronco, bone stock.
E350 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-30-2014, 12:40 PM   #12
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2012
Posts: 294
Re: reliability of old 7.3 engines pre Powerstroke. (1990-1

Thank you all so very much for the responses.

I am stoked that you took the time to be of help….

Rockbender, I recognize that pic and could not figure how to post it up….many thanks.

I calculated getting 20 MPG roughly and was surprised.
__________________
1994 SMB 7.3 with Quigley and Agile offroad goodies
1982 Wanderlodge Blue Bird FC33
copescobra is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-30-2014, 12:51 PM   #13
Senior Member
 
E350's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Sacramento Delta, CA
Posts: 1,024
Re: reliability of old 7.3 engines pre Powerstroke. (1990-1

Well then, why not sell it and buy a rig like mine which gets 12-13 mpg highway in its current configuration? Count your blessings...
__________________
2002 E350 ext.; 160K; 7.3L; 4R100 (w/4x4 deep pan & filter); 4x4 conv. w/2007 F250/F350 coil frnt axle (oppos. dual Bilstein press. shocks cured DW) diff chg from 3.55 to 3.73 (bad!); BW1356 t.c. (bad!); LT265/70R17/E Michelin LTX M/S2; Engel MT60 Combi Fridge-Freezer; 4 BP 380J pv panels; Auragen 5kw AC gen. in top alt. position; Webasto Dual-Top; Voyager top. 1995 5.8L EB Bronco, bone stock.
E350 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-30-2014, 01:53 PM   #14
Senior Member
 
rockbender's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Bend, OR
Posts: 800
Re: reliability of old 7.3 engines pre Powerstroke. (1990-1

Quote:
Originally Posted by copescobra
I calculated getting 20 MPG roughly and was surprised.
Don't change a thing! That is pretty phenomenal. I was really hoping to see 15-16, but to date my lifetime average is closer to 12. I've recently adjusted my timing which will hopefully improve things a bit but am held back by a transmission that has a non-locking torque converter (and 4.10 gears).

You'll have lots of folks jealous by getting sprinter mileage in a 4x4 Ford!
__________________
Josh
2009 Express AWD, CCV Top & 50-ish home build. Daily driver/camper/kid hauler
rockbender is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-30-2014, 05:21 PM   #15
Senior Member
 
larrie's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: Oregon Ciry Oregon
Posts: 2,854
Re: reliability of old 7.3 engines pre Powerstroke. (1990-1

Copes - great looking van. Ours is the older body style. We care less about the look of the exterior and are focusing on interior upgrades to make it more comfortable. Things like new foam on the dinette seats, new fridge, solar, converting closets to better storage options. We would eventually like to get an EB and maybe 4x4 but that is a ways off. The big plus is that the rig is paid for. Hate care payments.
__________________
Larrie
Read detailed trip reports, see photos and videos on my travel blog, luinil.com.
Current van: 2002 Ford E350 extended body camper with Colorado Camper Van pop top and Agile Offroad 4WD conversion.
larrie is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-30-2014, 08:04 PM   #16
Senior Member
 
carringb's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Corvallis, OR
Posts: 5,300
Re: reliability of old 7.3 engines pre Powerstroke. (1990-1

Quote:
Originally Posted by E350
carringb: Thanks! (This is why everyone should take what I say with a few grains of salt...)
Yeah generally I follow the "never mix any coolant" rule, but in this case we're talking about a motor that holds about 18 Gallons. It would not have been cheap and takes about a 4 hours for a proper flush because it takes to long to warm it up, then again to drain it.... So it was worth the phone call, and Zerex was surprisingly easy to get through to somebody who could actually answer technical questions!

PS - worst one is green and orange (dex-cool). It will quickly acidify under heat, and if its exposed to air it will form jello and completely plug up coolant passages. At least green and yellow only makes tapioca beads, so they can be flushed (of course by that point your 6.0 oil cooler will already be plugged). Also, straight up green will turn to silicone (like window caulking) inside EGR coolers under high EGTs. We went through 5 EGR coolers on one of our F650/Cummins-5.9Ls before digging deeper into the root cause.
__________________
2000 E450 dually V10 wagon
carringb is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-30-2014, 08:17 PM   #17
Senior Member
 
E350's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Sacramento Delta, CA
Posts: 1,024
Re: reliability of old 7.3 engines pre Powerstroke. (1990-1

carringb: Ok then, I will ask for the benefit of copescobra (and also selfishly for myself), ASSUMING A FULL FLUSH, do you have any favorite coolant or coolant and additive(s) for:

(1) 1994 7.3L IDI

(2) 2002 7.3L PSD

And while we are at it, also engine oil for both.
__________________
2002 E350 ext.; 160K; 7.3L; 4R100 (w/4x4 deep pan & filter); 4x4 conv. w/2007 F250/F350 coil frnt axle (oppos. dual Bilstein press. shocks cured DW) diff chg from 3.55 to 3.73 (bad!); BW1356 t.c. (bad!); LT265/70R17/E Michelin LTX M/S2; Engel MT60 Combi Fridge-Freezer; 4 BP 380J pv panels; Auragen 5kw AC gen. in top alt. position; Webasto Dual-Top; Voyager top. 1995 5.8L EB Bronco, bone stock.
E350 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-01-2014, 11:11 AM   #18
Senior Member
 
carringb's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Corvallis, OR
Posts: 5,300
Re: reliability of old 7.3 engines pre Powerstroke. (1990-1

Really just any standard green, with the proper SCA charge added, is fine. We used 100% recycled coolant from a local distributor on our non-EGR diesels. Pre-charged coolant is convenient if you don'w want to worry about adding SCA initially (might even end up costing less this way if you don't drive enough to periodically need SCA recharching)

Zerex does sell a long-life green pre-charged diesel coolant. However on vans that old, I suspect cooling system parts will probably break before the long-life benefits can be realized.

I'm in that boat too. I used to run the Ford Gold coolant and planned on changing it every 150,000. But starting about 260k miles something breaks about once every other year and it ends up draining itself anyways. First time it was the radiator bursting then I had couple heater lines rupture. So I went back to green since I'll probably have to do the radiator hoses soon, and maybe the water pump (still original!).
__________________
2000 E450 dually V10 wagon
carringb is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-01-2014, 11:54 AM   #19
Senior Member
 
E350's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Sacramento Delta, CA
Posts: 1,024
Re: reliability of old 7.3 engines pre Powerstroke. (1990-1

Thanks carringb!

Below is from:

http://www.thedieselstop.com/forums/f23 ... ow-277671/

It mentions IDIs and PSDs.

"I posted a request for information on glycol during my last maintenance on a 6.0 and the following was posted on my question. This is the answer to your questions.....grab a coffee...


I've been getting lots of PM's about Bob's coolant/SCA article (the sticky that was closed), and I would like to address a few things to help folks better understand. I think Bob realizes that much of his information is out-dated, pertains to certain engines other than our Powerstrokes, and is just plain wrong.

To give you a little background, first let me say that I've had extensive training and education in the field of coolants, some by the coolant manufacturers themselves. I worked with International during their cavitation crisis of the 6.9L and 7.3L IDI, helping to write bulletins, provide technical field data, and testing several different types of coolants, SCA's and mixtures thereof. I've operated and maintained a large fleet (100+ vehicles) of International/Ford 7.3L Powerstrokes. I am also a Mechanical Engineer with a background in Materials Science who has studied cavitation in cylinder walls and water pumps. Coolants are my specialty.

Where diesel cylinder cavitation is concerned, the bubbles are formed by the rapid flexing of the cylinder wall liners as the high compression, high energy diesel combustion process takes place. Much like if you filled a plastic liter pop bottle up with water and rapidly flexed the sides of the bottle back and forth with your hand. Bubbles form without any heat present. The bubbles in diesel cylinder wall cavitation don't explode, they implode due to pressure. It is this implosion against the metal surface that causes the pitting to form in the outside of the cylinder wall. Eventually the prolonged pitting become a hole. Water/coolant enters the cylinder, and thus we have engine failure (usually via hydrolock). Unlike gasoline engines, all diesel engines experience some level of inherent cavitation, some worse than others. FWIW, the Ford 6.9L and 7.9L IDI's origianlly had serious cavitation issues because Ford did not initially require (or add) SCA to the coolant. Ford later issued a bulletin to address that, and problems decreased dramatically.

As Bob stated, SCA's are one method of inhibiting cavitation by providing a barrier on the coolant side of the cylinder wall. However, I would like to say that it is not necessarily the SCA's displaced layer that can cause scale and coolant system plugging, but the components in the SCA itself, particularly when mixed with H2O or glycol. The use of conventional SCA is effective, but it requires testing, careful dosing, and frequent flushing. It will reduce heat transfer, and exacerbate water pump and other engine component failure.

One thing that importantly needs to be corrected, and a mistake than many misinformed people make, is that not all OAT coolants are like what GM uses. GM typically uses a "Dexcool" forumulation, which is specifically not recommended for your diesel engine. Dexcool type coolants were never intended for diesel applications. There are many modern Heavy Duty Extended Life Coolants specifically designed for diesels. Delo ELC, Rotella ELC, International's Fleetrite ELC, CAT ELC, Mobil 1 ELC, and a host of others. They will address diesel cavitatation, provide superior metal corrosion protection, provide better heat transfer, require no testing and maintenance, be free of harmful abrasive silicates, borates, and phosphates, and have an operating life up to 1 million miles (Delo ELC). In fact International, who made your engine, recommends and factory-fills with these Heavy Duty Extended Life Coolants (Fleetrite ELC/Shell Rotella ELC). And in fact almost all heavy duty diesel manufacturers use Heavy Duty ELC's meeting the most strict requirements in the industry...Caterpillar's EC-1. Very little to do with GM's OAT coolant.

No where has Ford said you can not use a heavy duty ELC in your Powerstroke due to seal incompatibility. That is simply more misinformation. As we know International makes the engine and uses the HD ELC coolant, generally in more harsh, commercial applications. Seals are fine. The only coolants in the Owner's Manual Ford recommends you don't use are Dexcool and Ford's Specialty Orange. Owners and fleets have been using HD ELC successfully, and in fact with better success, for many, many years.

Another correction...Ford's Gold (G-05) coolant is nothing like a Heavy Duty ELC coolant. Thus is will not meet the more stricts specs of other Heavy Duty ELC coolants, or provide the higher level of protection. The Gold is simply a universal hybrid, one-size-fits-all coolant that Ford uses in its entire line up that, with the exception of the Powerstroke, are all gasoline engines. Ford simply uses the Gold in your diesel out of convenience, simplicity, cost, and uniformity throughout it's product line and dealerships. The Gold coolant contains conventional (green coolant) components like silicate, which eventually form microscopic abrasives that eat water pump seals. It provides a lower level of cavitation protection using traditional SCA's like Nitrite, it has a shorter life, it reduces heat transfer compared to HD ELC's, and it in fact does require testing and SCA maintenance if you are an enthusiast about protecting your engine. In fact Ford recommends you add SCA to the Gold in certain F-Series applications. Caterpillar and John Deere also recommend adding SCA if it is going to be used in their diesels. Ironically, Ford's Gold will not meet International's heavy duty diesel B-1 spec. HD ELC's will. The Gold will work, but it's not the best.

For the record, adding SCA to a HD ELC will not produce anything close to "mud" or "goop". That is more misinformation. HD ELC's and SCA's are completely compatible, although not recommended only because you will lose the long-life properties of the HD ELC. There is no need to add SCA to HD ELC's. "Extenders" are available to add to HD ELC's if you want to further extend their life from the 300K, 500K, or 750K mile mark (depending on brand).

I have no intention of discrediting Bob's comments about the Evans and RMI-25, only to inform you. Evans is a good product, although expensive and hard to find. Less expensive, easier to find modern HD ELC's provide similar operating lives and similar (or better) protection. And the Evans does require modification of your cooling system to run low pressure, when your water pump seal is designed to run (and seal) under higher pressure, as documented by Ford. I have not used RMI-25 and don't plan to for reasons I won't discuss here. I would not recommend putting anything into your cooling system other than coolant and SCA.

Additionally, these days it is not appropriate to identify coolants by color. Color means nothing. A "green" coolant could be anything from a conventional, to a pre-charged, to a G-05, to an ELC. Same with red, purple, pink, gold, etc. You have to know what type of coolant it is.

There are 4 choices for your Powerstroke....

Conventional coolant (usually green) with the addition of SCA at initial fill. Frequent SCA testing and maintenance there after.

Pre-charged coolant (usually purple or pink). Comes with an initial dose of SCA. Frequent SCA testing and maintenance required thereafter.

G-05 coolants. Comes pre-charged with SCA package. Fush required at 50K miles. Semi-annual SCA testing and maintenance recommended.

Heavy Duty Extended Life Coolants. Come pre-charged with carboxylate inhibitors. No testing or maintenance. Super protection. Super long life.

Specialty coolants. Evans. Waterless, pressureless. Long life. No maintenance or testing. Expensive.

Not to be used - Dexcool, Universal coolants, All-makes-all-models, etc.

I use Chevron's Delo HD ELC. Good for 750K miles/8 years or 1M miles with addition of an extender."
__________________
2002 E350 ext.; 160K; 7.3L; 4R100 (w/4x4 deep pan & filter); 4x4 conv. w/2007 F250/F350 coil frnt axle (oppos. dual Bilstein press. shocks cured DW) diff chg from 3.55 to 3.73 (bad!); BW1356 t.c. (bad!); LT265/70R17/E Michelin LTX M/S2; Engel MT60 Combi Fridge-Freezer; 4 BP 380J pv panels; Auragen 5kw AC gen. in top alt. position; Webasto Dual-Top; Voyager top. 1995 5.8L EB Bronco, bone stock.
E350 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-01-2014, 12:06 PM   #20
Senior Member
 
carringb's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Corvallis, OR
Posts: 5,300
Re: reliability of old 7.3 engines pre Powerstroke. (1990-1

^That's a good point about "universal" coolants. That only means topping off won't cause a reaction. It does not mean they will provide the same protection as the proper coolant. Even though "universal" coolant is usually green, it is not the same as conventional green, and should not be used to fill an empty cooling system, at least not long term. Won't hurt a thing for short term use like a road-side fix you plan on doing over at home.

I like the ELCs. I just don't think a 15-20 year old van will make it more yrs or 750k more miles before it'll need to be drained for some other reason, so they probably won't be cost effective. But if it provides better peace of mind, that by all means that is the way to go!
__________________
2000 E450 dually V10 wagon
carringb is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are Off

» Sportsmobile Registry

Sporty

BusTalker

Turtle

rafeman
Add your Sportsmobile
» Featured Campgrounds

Reviews provided by

Powered by vBadvanced CMPS v3.2.3
Disclaimer:

This website is not affiliated with or endorsed by Sportsmobile SIP or any of its affiliates. This is an independent, unofficial site.


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 05:28 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8 Beta 4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.