Drill a couple weep holes in the lower engine shield and pop 4 shutter clips. Hardly earth shattering.......
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Oh yeah, well, 41.6Gone are any regrets I had in choosing the ecoboost over the hybrid.
Conversely, us hybrid owners giggle when we fill up every few weeks......
I have guaranteed replacement coverage on my Hybrid. Since my exact hybrid is on Carvana right now for $42,500, I’m goodGone are any regrets I had in choosing the ecoboost over the hybrid.
Hybrid is still better. It is a non-GDI motor where the Ecoboost is. Have fun dealing with the Carbon issues that come with a GDI Turbo motor.Gone are any regrets I had in choosing the ecoboost over the hybrid.
I love all you Ecoboost Jerks! Just wait! You will get served with a heavy dose of Carbon in the miles to come.Wait……let me jump start my dead hybrid so I can get it outside before my house burns down. Lol
I don’t have an ecoboost. I have a hybrid with another one coming.I love all you Ecoboost Jerks! Just wait! You will get served with a heavy dose of Carbon in the miles to come.
What parts? Did you not read this thread? It requires no parts. It is the drilling of some holes and the removal of some parts.Oh goody, my Maverick is supposed to be delivered any day and I bet they won't complete the sale until the recall repair has been done. Now it will have to sit at the dealer until they get these parts in.
Not all GDI engines have this issue. Toyota has direct and port injection to clean valves.The new engines will be next on the block. They all suffer from the same problem all GDI engines have: Excess carbon build-up on the valves and piston rings. Once the rings start failing the rod bearings fail causing engine failures and oil fires. There needs to be a maintenance interval for intake/ring cleaning on the GDI engines to prevent it. It's an industry-wide problem that will persist. If you think that you have an "improved, newer style" engine that can avoid this you're deluded.
So, what exactly does this mean... Anyone?
Yep.The way I read it is that they'll drill holes in the plate under the engine (the one that makes it difficult to change oil) to let the leaking fluids drain out - no fluids, no fire.
Those are called dual injected engines. The person you quoted was speaking of GDI specifically, which implies direct injection - not dual injection.Not all GDI engines have this issue. Toyota has direct and port injection to clean valves.
Weird that it says build dates starting in February of 2021?No, they mean Aug 8th.
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