Berg87
Member
- Joined
- November 21, 2008
- Messages
- 13
- Reaction score
- 0
- City, State
- Columbus Ohio
- Year, Model & Trim Level
- 2003 Explorer XLT v6 2wd
Approx one month ago i began to notice what i believe to be detonation during light to medium-light acceleration. Normally i'm towing a small cargo trailer with some gear total weight about 1500 pounds; this weekend I drove with out the cargo trailer and the same issue was present.
If i use 2/3rds to full throttle i do not notice detonation, either its not happening or i can't tell due to the louder sounds of intake and exhaust.
My Exp has 66k, all orginal except air filter, brake pads, and oil; have used 87 octane everytime but a handfull of fill ups. Still averaging the same MPG since new.
I have searched here about this problem and so far only see two fixes, actually one fix and one treatment for the symptom.
The fix is to have a compentent Ford tech spend time with reprogramming the ECM and the treatment is to use Seafoam or Fords version to clean excess carbon from the pistons. I tend to think i don't have the carbon issue because i do get in the throttle regularly and take the RPM's to the high shift point at least a couple times a week.
If the real fix is ECM programming, how did my ECM get out of wack in the first place? I do not know any compentent Ford techs here in Columbus area. And at Dealer labor rates don't care to fund sombody's mortage payment while they "learn" on my vehicle.
Anyone here know what caused the issue? Any ideas how to correct it? Will using Seafoam every 40-50k be part of regular maintenance?
Thanks in advance
If i use 2/3rds to full throttle i do not notice detonation, either its not happening or i can't tell due to the louder sounds of intake and exhaust.
My Exp has 66k, all orginal except air filter, brake pads, and oil; have used 87 octane everytime but a handfull of fill ups. Still averaging the same MPG since new.
I have searched here about this problem and so far only see two fixes, actually one fix and one treatment for the symptom.
The fix is to have a compentent Ford tech spend time with reprogramming the ECM and the treatment is to use Seafoam or Fords version to clean excess carbon from the pistons. I tend to think i don't have the carbon issue because i do get in the throttle regularly and take the RPM's to the high shift point at least a couple times a week.
If the real fix is ECM programming, how did my ECM get out of wack in the first place? I do not know any compentent Ford techs here in Columbus area. And at Dealer labor rates don't care to fund sombody's mortage payment while they "learn" on my vehicle.
Anyone here know what caused the issue? Any ideas how to correct it? Will using Seafoam every 40-50k be part of regular maintenance?
Thanks in advance