High Mileage Sport Trac 250K and counting | Ford Explorer Forums - Serious Explorations

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High Mileage Sport Trac 250K and counting

firefly1246

Well-Known Member
Joined
November 23, 2010
Messages
172
Reaction score
18
City, State
Greenville, SC
Year, Model & Trim Level
'04 EB
Hey all,

Thought I would start a thread to show what maintenance has been needed on my 2003 Explorer Sport Trac XLT 2WD, now that i have owned it over 3 years. This truck is now my primary daily driver now that my 2004 Explorer EB has been totaled by someone pulling out in front of me and my Corvette has been sold to make way for a minivan for the wife and our newborn twin boys.

Truck is a 2003 Red XLT 2WD, 4.10 limited slip, center console, overhead console, factory hard bed cover

The truck was purchased brand new by my Father in Law in 2003. Garage kept its entire life, oil religiously changed every 5K, and typically maintained at the Ford Dealership. Zero rust as it never left the state of NC. To make keeping up with oil changes easy to remember he would change it whenever the odometer hit 5K. So even if it was a hair early or a hair late it would get changed when the odometer rolled.

I purchased it from him Nov 2015 after the transmission wore out at 227,064 miles. So initialing i was going to just fix it up to flip it, but ended up really liking it. The body and paint was in really good shape, just a couple rock chips, the front seat was worn out, the steering wheel worn out, and the body mounts were worn out. He had just put a bunch of money into replacing the brake pads, and the front upper and lower A arms and balljoints. Note the tranny fluid had never been changed, failure was the bands were finally worn out.

227,064 - Nov 2015
-Replaced transmission with a used 176K tranny from a wrecked 03 Explorer Sport, replaced front and rear gaskets and seals. It was the lowest mileage one I could find locally that was already pulled. Flushed a bunch of Mercon V through the torque converter and transmission. Put a new Motorcraft Filter, have 2 magnetic strips (took the one from the old tranny), and had a drain plug welded into the pan. Adjusted the bands
-Cleaned up engine bay, 12 years of gunk
-Replaced Anti-roll bar bushings - Prothane
-Replaced Shocks - Rancho
-Replaced diff lube oil, friction modifier, and painted diff cover
-Replaced Front Driver Seat, found a used one out of a wrecked 45K Sport Trac
-Installed Aftermarket Seat Heaters, wired with a relay to the OEM seat heater fuse box.
-Replaced Steering Wheel with used one from a wrecked Sport Trac

229,811 - Dec 2015
Drove it around town and up to Richmond, VA and back ran great
-Dropped Tranny pan and replaced Mercon V and cleaned up magnetic strips
-Changed Oil Castrol High Mileage 5W-30, Motorcraft Filter
-Swapped out the transmission output housing seal with a Motorcraft one, the first one I used was a National brand but would fall off and leaked about a half quart of tranny fluid. I guess it is just a hair smaller than the oem Motorcraft one.
-Replaced Body Mounts with Prothane ones - 2 days

-Scott

Photos when i got my Sport Trac:
24347912035_ba8d17aeef_c.jpg


Worn Seat:
24265425921_5bbdd40f6d_c.jpg


Worn Steering Wheel:
23719741414_f4bca407ac_c.jpg


Worn Body Mount:
23719726394_4475db7c9e_c.jpg


Old Tranny and Fluid:
23719739544_b9782a2d62_c.jpg

23980114339_3da5f3642b_c.jpg
 



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230,900 - March 2016
-Front 2" TT and warrior Rear Shackles
-2" Hubcentric Wheel Spacers, 17" Wheels from my 3rd Gen Explorer, with 265/70-17 Cooper Discover ATP Tires. 3rd gen have a different wheel offset that require wheel spacers to mount on a 1st gen sport trac/2nd gen explorer
-Front Alignment at the Ford Dealer
-Clay bared the paint, polished the paint, tons of touchup paint for the front and doors, and waxed it. Paint is really looking good.

Took a couple photos of the truck with the original 16" wheels and Michelin LTX tires.

2" TT with 16" wheels and 2" hubcentric wheel spacers.
25058652233_c253e4e119_c.jpg


Side View: 2" TT with 16" wheels and 2" hubcentric wheel spacers.
25685310095_c010dee5bd_c.jpg


17" 3rd gen wheels and 265/70-17 tires and 2" TT: Front tires are just even with the fenders
25058640093_cd6a7c835e_c.jpg


25592706661_977f6baafc_c.jpg
 






234,997 - Nov 2016
-Flush Coolant, Prestone, New Upper and Lower Radiator Hoses
-Oil and Filter Castrol Magnatec 5W-30 Purloator Filter
-Painted Bumpers and Side Skirts, Gloss Black Krylon Fusion <- this makes the truck look 10x better, totally worth it

Painted Bumpers:
25566678412_46d4461765_c.jpg

31576378693_b1b33fdcbd_c.jpg

32237052932_24c886de82_c.jpg

32237052772_230278b37e_c.jpg

31544643384_858f6bf853_c.jpg


Finish Product:
32267022111_d9a170d59b_c.jpg


32009757020_d5b86b6304_c.jpg
 






240,528 - June 2017
-Oil Change: 5W-30 Mobil 1 + Motorcraft Filter
-helped my neighbor out with his CTS-V and he had 18 leftover Motorcraft FL-820S Filters from his F-150 he sold that fit my Sport trac, I am now set for the next 90K miles. :)

244,920 - Nov 2017
-Replaced Spark Plugs and wires - Autolite APP103 Double Platinum, Carquest Wires (these are junk wires, the metal clip that snaps onto the plug is cheap and breaks/bends. I do not recommend)

Old plugs were only single Platinum Plugs and wore out really bad, Father in law stated they weren't that old so maybe 30-45K on them at most.

Old Plug vs New Plug:
40162217903_29b1f22d80.jpg
 






244,964 Dec 2017
Started having a ticking/bearing noise. so replaced the Upper Belt Idler Pully -> didn't fix it, Then replaced the Tensioner/Idler Pulley -> Didn't Fix it. However I left the new ones as the originals had a lot of mileage and they are cheap. So did some research and found the Timing Chain Tensioner could be worn out. Purchase 2 brand new Motorcraft Timing Chain Tensioners and replaced them. The rear one was a piece of cake through the pass side front wheel well. The front one is tougher, had to remove the plastic thermostat housing to get to it, and then the hoses are glued to it, so replaced the 2 hoses around the thermostat housing. The original Tensioners had plenty of spring life left.

Well This opened a huge can of worms. Made my problems worse. Now when under acceleration around 2,000rpm a new noise started. After a couple hundred miles at startup was a really loud rattle. Even though I primed the Tensioners, I believe this was the straw that broke my Front and Rear Timing Chain Guides. :(

-Replaced Upper Belt Idler Pulley
-Replaced Tensioner/Idler Pulley
-Replaced 2 Coolant hoses around thermostat, topped up with fluid
-Replaced Front and Rear Timing Chain Tensioners
 






245,303 -July 2018

After hearing the timing chain slap at startup, did research and found my Timing Chain Guides had failed and requires removing the engine. So I let it sit on my driveway until I had time to get it done. Had some house projects that became a higher priority and had my Explorer and Corvette that I could drive so i wasn't in a hurry. But someone hit me in my 3rd gen Explorer and totalled it and needed to sell the Corvette as babies were coming. So this became my top priority to get on the road.

While I had the engine out I also replaced every gasket, every single coolant hose, etc. The area around the rear main seal had also started to leak (should have replaced when swapped tranny, ended up being the Upper Oil Pan Gasket), the oil filter Housing O-ring was leaking, and Upper Oil Pan Gasket was also leaking around the sides.

-Replaced Timing Chain and Guides - Cloyes
-Replaced Upper and Lower Oil Pan Gaskets-Motorcraft (had purchased a while before but didn't install)
-Replaced Front and Rear Main Seals-Felpro
-Replaced Timing Cover Gasket-Felpro
-Replaced Valve Cover Gasket-Felpro
-Replaced Intake Manifold Gasket-Felpro
-New Intake Manifold Bolts - These were really hard to get out and the Torx head stripped out, had to use a couple combos of EZ outs to get 3 of them out. Pain in the Butt due to the rubber around the bolts being hard as a rock. Replacement Dorman bolts use Hex Heads.
-Replaced every single Coolant Hose
-New Prestone Coolant
-Flushed Out Radiator- had some rust looking residue in it
-New Fan - Found I had a crack in my fan
-Oil Change and Filter 5W-30 Castrol Conventional and Motorocraft Filter
-New Motorcraft Fuel Filter
-New Air Filter
-New Heater Valve - the plastic cracked pipe was brittle and cracked when trying to remove old coolant hose
-New Exhaust Sensor- dunno what this is officially called, but it is right next to the EGR on the driver side, it was brittle and snapped off when removing it to get the intake manifold out of the way
-New Oil Filter Housing O-ring
-New Passenger Side Exhaust Manifold Gasket - had to remove to replace O ring on Oil Filter Housing

This took me 2 weekends and I worked on it every day after work. Had 2 big roadblocks that slowed me down. The Intake Manifold Bolts required me buying some EZ outs and took me multiple evenings to remove. The second thing was trying to remove the front timing driver side timing chain guide. Apparently for some time period the slot between the head and the block that the guide goes through doesn't have enough room to remove and reinstall the guide. I assume the head was riding one side of the tolerance band and the block was riding the other side of the tolerance band. 3 ways people fix this: 1) remove head, 2) buy a specific brand of guide that is 2 pieces and removable, 3) cut the original up to remove and grind away the aluminum head to allow room to put in a new guide. I choose the later because my head gasket was fine (not many others on forum have complained about it being an issue) and i had already purchased my guides and chains.

Found my rear timing chain guide had broke, and my front center guide was broke after opening it up. I followed the YouTube Video on Cloyes Channel and purchased the OTC timing toolset.




Photos:
Engine Removed:
41241877580_1f0e0a93f5_z.jpg


Broken Front Timing Chain: I got really lucky, the Guide (circled in blue) fell and wedged inself between the lower portion of the guide (circled in green) and the chain and still provided tension. However, the chain at startup slapped against the metal u shape where the guide was supposed to be (circled in Red).
43454466971_aefb7d5b95_z.jpg


Wear on the Broken Front Guide: This was the piece in the photo above circled in Blue that was wedged in the chain. I only ran maybe 30 miles on the truck after the startup metal slapping noise started.
42738156564_88bb558009_z.jpg


My broken Rear Timing Chain Guide: The two pieces of plastic where my fingers are pointing should be joined together. I think this was the noise I initially had, prior to replacing the Hydraulic Tensioners.
42738156714_78b75c5cfc_z.jpg


Nice Clean Motor- Oil changed every 5K with Conventional
43406072272_874f3c374e_z.jpg


43406074572_e809ca50ac_z.jpg


The Front Driver Side Guide that I couldn't get out. I ended up covering up the inside of the engine with plastic tarp and taping it up. Then used a cutoff wheel to cut the guide so i could get it out. I then used a carbide burr to hog away the aluminum on the head.
29180551688_896f7360ca_z.jpg


Extra material: The shiny bit is the head, i removed about .075" in the spot where the rivet on the guide needed to pass through. This took a while so I didn't get shavings everywhere and it is at an odd angle.
29180550848_c8eac4f55c_z.jpg
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Brand new Guide:
29180551758_e733d72ecb_z.jpg


Original Rear Main Seal: looks like my leak was actually the Upper Oil Pan Gasket and not the Rear main seal.
43002418092_35b5c3ced0_z.jpg
 






New Front Timing Chains:
28567556937_573900e4cd_z.jpg


Pictures of the tools used in the OTC tool kit for doing the timing chains:
29583470808_53bbe664d8_z.jpg


28567566787_104f72067c_z.jpg

43406072262_71eb7a2443_z.jpg


Back in the truck:
42549645825_22b439d1da_z.jpg
 






245,393 - July 2018
Did an oil change just in case there were some metal shavings
-Oil Change 5W-30 Castrol Magnatec, Motorcraft Filter FL-820S
-Recharged A/C system used UV dye. -AC had gotten weak and obviously there must be a leak somewhere. Will find later when the UV dye leaks out. After charge the A/C is ice cold. Father in Law stated it hadn't ever been recharged.
-WD-40 in the bed cover keyhole and the driver and pass door. The key wouldn't turn to lock/unlock them. WD-40 made it a quick fix.

248, 303 - Sept 2018
Wheel Bearings Finally bit the bullet, had some play in them
-Replaced Front Wheel Bearings - National A-2 and A-5 used Valvoline Synthetic Wheel Bearing Grease

sorry no photos
 






249,005 Nov 2018
Started having some ticking and bearing noise from the upper portion of the front passenger side. Changed oil to see if anything in the oil that would help, didn't find anything.
-Oil Change 5W-30 Havoline + Motorcraft Filter

249,241 Dec 2018
Ticking/bearing crunching noise is sounding worse, now occurs all the time, Sounds like coming from Alternator. Removed serpentine belt and noise went away, found I had some play in the bearing and did make some noise when I spun it by hand.
-Replaced Alternator, Bosch
 






Current Issues I need to fix:

-Have a bearing noise on startup on really cold mornings- maybe the Cam Followers?
-High Pressure AC Hose leaking at the crimp near the Condensor, UV dye and black light made this easy to find.
-Rear Diff Seal is leaking where the driveshaft goes into the diff.
-Front Driver Side Door Unlock switch doesn't unlock, but the passenger side works and the key fob works.

Truck Today:

Used Engine to swap in buddies Mazda
32266065441_659c4d70aa_z.jpg


Truck as it looks today: Black Fusion Paint is holding up really well
42738157764_bf4da4d190_z.jpg
 


















Firefly... I'm IMPRESSED....... and I'm a guy that's usually hard to impress. Great write up and thanks for the pictures. Your S/T is a keeper. Other than the powertrain work how did you like doing the body bushings? I did mine a couple years ago. Pretty straight forward....if your hardware is not rusted away. Mine was in good shape (Texs vehicle). I change my oil (actually do all my maintenance) based on the 5k mileage cycle. Easy to remember. Good to see how clean the interior of the engine is.
 






Firefly... I'm IMPRESSED....... and I'm a guy that's usually hard to impress. Great write up and thanks for the pictures. Your S/T is a keeper. Other than the powertrain work how did you like doing the body bushings? I did mine a couple years ago. Pretty straight forward....if your hardware is not rusted away. Mine was in good shape (Texs vehicle). I change my oil (actually do all my maintenance) based on the 5k mileage cycle. Easy to remember. Good to see how clean the interior of the engine is.

First off thank you for the compliment. I usually like reading these kind of posts from others and thought I would contribute.

I like the Body Bushings as the body doesn’t wobble around anymore. However I can’t comment to how they compare to good condition OEM body mounts due to them already being shot when I got the truck.

In regard to installation, when I did the Body Bushings I had to buy new front bolts as the threads were rusted which delayed me. Bad design as they hold water. I coated my new ones in anti-seeze, but hope I never have to remove them. It ended up taking me 2 days to swap out the bushings. Each side took a day due to waiting on the bolts. Buying a large rounded channel loc and using the torch to heat up the locktite on the bolts made it much easier to remove.

-Scott
 






Great write up, thankyou.

Did you resolve bearing noise at cold startup?
 






I haven’t resolved it yet. I think it is the cam followers. I have removed and replaced the 6 cam followers as well as the hydraulic lifter on the passenger side. All 6 cam followers had some play in them, the 3rd from the front was the worst. The hydraulic lifters were all perfect, but i replaced them since i already purchased them. I ran out of time this past weekend, plan to finish it up shortly and this fixes it. Having twin newborns has greatly sucked up my project time.

They didn’t seem as bad as I have seen failures on the 4.6 and 5.4 online, but obviously are need replacement. The 3 valve motors were apparently really bad. I purchased a kit from Ford Performance for a v8 2 valve which was cheaper then buying them separate. They upgraded the cam follower for the 4.0 in 2006 using the upgraded one designed for the Ford GT Supercar and the Shelby GT500. The upgraded cam follower has an extra oil squirter from the portion over the lifter to squirt on the cam/cam follower bearing.

Cam Followers
Original(individual) YL2Z-6564-AA
GT-500 (individual) 4G7Z-6564-AA
GT-500 (v8 kit) M-6529-MSVT

Hydraulic Lifters F77Z-6500-AB

OTC Tool 7928, must modify by removing pin and replace with a bolt, so it is a 2 piece tool. Won't be able to install or remove it as an assembly.

To remove the passenger side valve cover, I had to drain the coolant and remove all the coolant lines on that side. I also had to remove the heat shield over the evaporator or you can't slide the cover over the cams. I removed the alternator to get extra room to the first cam follower. The first cam follower I couldn't use the tool as it wouldn't fit over the valve and had to use the "screwdriver method" that people use on the 4.6/5.4. I was not a fan of this as i was afraid of nicking the cam. I assume the back cam follower on the driver side is going to be the same and be a bigger pain cause the firewall and brake booster are in the way.

Hopfully this fixes my issue.

Cam Follower Tool That won't fit on the Passenger Side Front. Note this is only half the tool:
32185165847_effb0a039c_z.jpg


Cam Follower and Hydraulic Lifter Removed:
32185165987_3d03a3e29f_z.jpg


Original Cam Follower on the left, and the upgraded GT-500 Cam Follower on the Right. Black Arrow pointing to the added Oil Squirter:
40196534853_55950a3522_z.jpg


How to use the Valve Compressor Tool from the Service Manual:
40196535103_62786af343_z.jpg
 






Thanks for reply.

I have same cam follower removal tool, I got it to work on all cam followers by rotating the cam shaft to get it in. Then rotating it back ( I think) anyway got all followers out & in OK.
 






Hey Guys, its been awhile, but wanted to post an update on the Sport Trac, currently have 259, 177 miles on it and running well, still my daily driver. I am not putting as many miles on it , as we don't take it on many long trips and my commute to work is only 4 miles, so they are now about 80% around town miles. We now take the minivan anytime we go on long trips, but my 2.5 year old boys absolutely love riding around in it. I think they like being able to easily see out of the rear windows in their carseats vs the minivan.

Current Issues 7/2021:
-Rear Main Seal/Rear Oil Pan slight leak - just a weep, but a bit frustrated as i replaced both of these when i did the engine out service for timing chain
-Door Unlock button on driver side doesn't work, it does lock fine, so have to hit pass side button. I believe it is a bad wire and just haven't spent time to fix this
-Original Radio volume knob sometimes doesn't work right, it is lazy. if it gets worse i will just buy replacement radio.
-Pass side front upper ball joint boot tore, need either new boot or ball joint, need to contact Moog as it is less than 1 year old and very few miles


252, 536 3/2020
Front wheel spindles have a bunch of wear, i guess i didn't replace front wheel bearings early enough. They don't make new 2WD replacement sport trac spindles, (I could have gotten 4" lift knuckles or Ranger ones, which I would have had to put a 1" smaller brake rotor) so I found 2 lowish mileage(~100K) spindles from junk yard. Also my passenger front upper control arm ball joint was shot
-Replaced Front Knuckles/Spindles used, ~100K, painted black
-Replaced Both Front Upper Control Arm, Moog (update pass side the boot split open and failed, need to get new boot or replace ball joint)
-Replaced Both Tie Rod Ends, Moog (both were originals)
-Replaced Front Bearings National
-Replaced Front Brake Rotors and Pads
-Front Alignment

255,130 6/2020
-Change Oil and Filter, Mobil 1 High Mileage + Motorcraft FL820 Filter

255,142 7/2020
Rear diff pinion seal started weeping a hair, I purchased the seal a long time a go when i bought the truck but didn't have the correct tool at the time to do it
-Rear Diff Pinion Seal, Timken
-75W-140 Rear Diff Lube Valvoline , topped off what leaked out when replacing seal ~1quart

256,393 10/2020
Had wheel bearing noises again (sounds crunchy), replaced the bearings with different brand to try something different, but my actual issue which I found out later is that it was the REAR wheel bearings.
-Replaced Front Wheel Bearings, Timken
-Rotate Tires (tires not wearing evenly, wearing more on the inside of the tire. I think this is due to the front springs sagging, i have had to twist the torsion bars about a half turn every 6 months or so. Driver side torsion bar currently maxed out.

256, 914 12/2020
Have AC leak, found the crimp on the hose near driver side radiator had UV dye leaking out of it. Have heard AC Compressors eat themselves (sister n law mustang just had the issue) so while i replaced the hose i swapped out the compressor for insurance.
-Replaced AC Compressor, AC Hose Comp to Cond to Drier, Drier, and Filter
-30oz of R134a + 9 oz oil and some UV dye

258K 3/2021
Radiator had a slight leak at plastic end cap on pass side, at the crimp
-New Radiator, and fill up with Prestone Coolant

258,992 6/2021
On some cold startups when the truck has sit a few days, there is a millisecond of where engine seems to have no oil pressure and it sounds like crap. I think it is the oil tensioners not putting pressure against chain before oil pressure hits. Once driving it is fine, and if it only sits 1 days it starts fine. Wanted to try something, and happened to see a youtube video about Lucas Oil Stabilizer, which reminded me of that gear thing that they used to have at auto part store. So I decided to try it, didn't have much too lose other then $10, and magically it seems to work, decided to try 1/2 quart first. Been about a month and haven't heard the sound since. I spend a lot of time on the BobistheOilGuy Forums and know there are lots of opinions on "snake oils and stuff". The Lucas is extremely thick (much much thicker than 20W-50 or even 25W-60 motor oil). For comparision, Lucas is like honey while 20W-50 is a hair thicker than water. Curious next oil change trying 10w40 or 20w50 and seeing if i get same results, got a ton of 20W50 for the Jags...
-Change Oil and Filter, 5W-30 Mobil 1 High Mileage + 1/2 quart Lucas Oil Stabilizer + Motorcraft FL820S filter

259,159 7/2021
Rear Wheel bearings sound terrible, they make a crunchy noise all the time and very noticeable in the drivethrough when you can hear it echoing off the building wall. The limited slip clutches have also been worn out a long time ago. Old Clutch pack measures .599" on driver side, and .620" on passenger side, odd that they arent the same. Per my reading a normal new clutch pack should be .640" to .645" and sport (ie mustang) starts at .655". Found the cheapest new clutches was the entry level Ford Racing Pack which includes new Limited Slip addative ($10 value) and new cross pin bolt ($8 value) and was only $90 total, great value. I set my clutches using the original shim to get .650" (smallest i could get) So far seem to drive great.
-New Rear Axle Timken (Actually bearing says Koyo) bearing and seals
-New Ford Racing Clutches set at .650" thick for each side
-New Valvoline 75W-140 Gear Lube )~2.8 quarts + Ford Friction Modifier
-New Diff Cover Gasket + RTV
-New Rear Brake Pads (pads were like 75% worn and had these lying around, bought when i had some expiring large reward), Advance Auto Store brand Platinum Ceramic

-Scott
 






Hey Guys, its been awhile, but wanted to post an update on the Sport Trac, currently have 259, 177 miles on it and running well, still my daily driver. I am not putting as many miles on it , as we don't take it on many long trips and my commute to work is only 4 miles, so they are now about 80% around town miles. We now take the minivan anytime we go on long trips, but my 2.5 year old boys absolutely love riding around in it. I think they like being able to easily see out of the rear windows in their carseats vs the minivan.

Current Issues 7/2021:
-Rear Main Seal/Rear Oil Pan slight leak - just a weep, but a bit frustrated as i replaced both of these when i did the engine out service for timing chain
-Door Unlock button on driver side doesn't work, it does lock fine, so have to hit pass side button. I believe it is a bad wire and just haven't spent time to fix this
-Original Radio volume knob sometimes doesn't work right, it is lazy. if it gets worse i will just buy replacement radio.
-Pass side front upper ball joint boot tore, need either new boot or ball joint, need to contact Moog as it is less than 1 year old and very few miles


252, 536 3/2020
Front wheel spindles have a bunch of wear, i guess i didn't replace front wheel bearings early enough. They don't make new 2WD replacement sport trac spindles, (I could have gotten 4" lift knuckles or Ranger ones, which I would have had to put a 1" smaller brake rotor) so I found 2 lowish mileage(~100K) spindles from junk yard. Also my passenger front upper control arm ball joint was shot
-Replaced Front Knuckles/Spindles used, ~100K, painted black
-Replaced Both Front Upper Control Arm, Moog (update pass side the boot split open and failed, need to get new boot or replace ball joint)
-Replaced Both Tie Rod Ends, Moog (both were originals)
-Replaced Front Bearings National
-Replaced Front Brake Rotors and Pads
-Front Alignment

255,130 6/2020
-Change Oil and Filter, Mobil 1 High Mileage + Motorcraft FL820 Filter

255,142 7/2020
Rear diff pinion seal started weeping a hair, I purchased the seal a long time a go when i bought the truck but didn't have the correct tool at the time to do it
-Rear Diff Pinion Seal, Timken
-75W-140 Rear Diff Lube Valvoline , topped off what leaked out when replacing seal ~1quart

256,393 10/2020
Had wheel bearing noises again (sounds crunchy), replaced the bearings with different brand to try something different, but my actual issue which I found out later is that it was the REAR wheel bearings.
-Replaced Front Wheel Bearings, Timken
-Rotate Tires (tires not wearing evenly, wearing more on the inside of the tire. I think this is due to the front springs sagging, i have had to twist the torsion bars about a half turn every 6 months or so. Driver side torsion bar currently maxed out.

256, 914 12/2020
Have AC leak, found the crimp on the hose near driver side radiator had UV dye leaking out of it. Have heard AC Compressors eat themselves (sister n law mustang just had the issue) so while i replaced the hose i swapped out the compressor for insurance.
-Replaced AC Compressor, AC Hose Comp to Cond to Drier, Drier, and Filter
-30oz of R134a + 9 oz oil and some UV dye

258K 3/2021
Radiator had a slight leak at plastic end cap on pass side, at the crimp
-New Radiator, and fill up with Prestone Coolant

258,992 6/2021
On some cold startups when the truck has sit a few days, there is a millisecond of where engine seems to have no oil pressure and it sounds like crap. I think it is the oil tensioners not putting pressure against chain before oil pressure hits. Once driving it is fine, and if it only sits 1 days it starts fine. Wanted to try something, and happened to see a youtube video about Lucas Oil Stabilizer, which reminded me of that gear thing that they used to have at auto part store. So I decided to try it, didn't have much too lose other then $10, and magically it seems to work, decided to try 1/2 quart first. Been about a month and haven't heard the sound since. I spend a lot of time on the BobistheOilGuy Forums and know there are lots of opinions on "snake oils and stuff". The Lucas is extremely thick (much much thicker than 20W-50 or even 25W-60 motor oil). For comparision, Lucas is like honey while 20W-50 is a hair thicker than water. Curious next oil change trying 10w40 or 20w50 and seeing if i get same results, got a ton of 20W50 for the Jags...
-Change Oil and Filter, 5W-30 Mobil 1 High Mileage + 1/2 quart Lucas Oil Stabilizer + Motorcraft FL820S filter

259,159 7/2021
Rear Wheel bearings sound terrible, they make a crunchy noise all the time and very noticeable in the drivethrough when you can hear it echoing off the building wall. The limited slip clutches have also been worn out a long time ago. Old Clutch pack measures .599" on driver side, and .620" on passenger side, odd that they arent the same. Per my reading a normal new clutch pack should be .640" to .645" and sport (ie mustang) starts at .655". Found the cheapest new clutches was the entry level Ford Racing Pack which includes new Limited Slip addative ($10 value) and new cross pin bolt ($8 value) and was only $90 total, great value. I set my clutches using the original shim to get .650" (smallest i could get) So far seem to drive great.
-New Rear Axle Timken (Actually bearing says Koyo) bearing and seals
-New Ford Racing Clutches set at .650" thick for each side
-New Valvoline 75W-140 Gear Lube )~2.8 quarts + Ford Friction Modifier
-New Diff Cover Gasket + RTV
-New Rear Brake Pads (pads were like 75% worn and had these lying around, bought when i had some expiring large reward), Advance Auto Store brand Platinum Ceramic

-Scott
Scott, very impressive account of maintenance on your 2003 ST!!! I also have an '03 ST XLT / 4x4 and have kept it up like yours was. I have about 90K on it and even though it is in great shape, I have a little startup rattle and know that I'll have to do the timing chain replacement. Several years ago, when I first noticed the rattle, I started to override the starter relay to crank the engine without ignition, thereby priming the oil pressure galleries and pumping up the tensioners. My startups have always been without any rattle; so, I don't think that I've got anything actually broke yet. However, I'll be planning on pulling the engine in the near future and your writeup was very informative. I really appreciate your contribution to this Forum. Thank you again for the detailed report and pictures. Regards and V/R, gary schuetz in Phoenix AZ.
 



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Instead of over riding that starter relay just press gas pedal to floor before cranking then 4 short cranks while observing the oil pressure gauge once gauge moves remove foot from gas pedal then start 👍🏻

That sequence is called flood mode!
 






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