English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Rangers and F150s.

2006-07-03 07:39:59 · 6 answers · asked by Mike's Mission Machines 2 in Cars & Transportation Car Makes Ford

Don't care whether you like Ford or not, just like to know if it's true.

2006-07-03 08:03:54 · update #1

Probably be small too. Maybe 3.0 like the ones in Europe.

2006-07-03 08:04:41 · update #2

6 answers

It was supposed to be the motor that is in the Ford LCF (4.5 v-6) that was supposed to be put in the f-150 but was scrapped after the 6.0 that the motor is based on basically became a piece of crap.

Hear rumors of them trying to revive it, but will be based off of the new super duty engine that has to be on the market in 2007. where rumors of it loosing the oil fired injectors a possiblity.

The ranger has a diesel motor in the 1980s and people didn't buy them then..Don't know about now.

The super duty truck carries a 4.2 v-6 diesel in other markets under the f-250 name with a manual but don't know if that motor is clean enough to come here (espcially to be used in other Ford products)

If demand for a diesel comes, Ford will build it.. but right now, only 3 cars lines have a call for the diesel (that the general public would buy.. I am not considering the 650-750 and LCF series usually aimed at commercial interests)

Those 3 are:
F-super duty trucks
Econoline vans
Excursions

2006-07-03 11:02:51 · answer #1 · answered by gearbox 7 · 0 0

i does no longer problem to a lot approximately 4 litres,its in comparison to you put in a million/2 a tank to an entire tank, purely a small quantity of the Diesel will burn off, because it quite is a oil and not a spirit,something will discover its way into your oil and dilute it making the point upward push, So after a quick time purely supply the motor vehicle a oil replace, The diesel wont harm your engine, somebody i know positioned petrol in there diesel motor vehicle,we drained the tank and that i used the blended gas in my motor vehicle,yet that grew to become into extra a 40percentdiesel 60% petrol combination advert no longer 4 litres, in case you're in any doubt purely call your close by ford broking for suggestion.

2016-12-10 04:02:51 · answer #2 · answered by kull 4 · 0 0

Not for awhile. 2009 maybe. The new emission regulations for the states make it difficult to bring our European diesels
over here to the U.S. It is a very good idea and has been
floated around the company for sometime now.
Getting management to actually spend the money and
fund a program is an uphill battle. DCX Jeep may help
force the issue with their diesel entries.

2006-07-03 09:12:06 · answer #3 · answered by rjm96 4 · 0 0

if they do start putting diesels into smaller trucks i don t think that it would be that big of a engine and it would prolly be rare that it would be a turbo on it but that would be bitchen though

2006-07-03 08:03:51 · answer #4 · answered by scotch 2 · 0 0

Who cares. It will still be garbage

2006-07-03 07:46:57 · answer #5 · answered by king_davis13 7 · 0 0

I hope so.

2006-07-03 09:40:55 · answer #6 · answered by Josh S 7 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers