700,000 Mile 7.3 Powerstroke Teardown! Does This REALLY Have This Many Miles?

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  • čas přidán 14. 10. 2022
  • Please Visit www.Importapart.com to peruse our inventory, if you don't see what you need you can fill out our part request form OR email us at Importapartsales@gmail.com.
    Today's teardown is a biggin'. A 7.3 Powerstroke I made another video on questioning the actual miles of this engine. We covered all of the information that led me to believe this may be a low mileage engine, carfax, pictures, etc. If you haven't seen that video, check it out here. • 70K OR 700K? Ford 7.3 ...
    Join me as I tear this engine all the way down, inspect the parts, break some stuff all in an attempt to gauge this engines true miles.
    Why am I doing this? Well, I own and run a full service auto salvage facility in the Saint Louis area, and part of our model is selling good parts off of bad engines. We process a lot of engines every year and some of them are pretty spectacularly blown up or have some wild circumstances around why they are in my possession. We do not rebuilt or repair these engines, but merely offer good parts to people who do.
    I hope you enjoyed this video, as always I appreciate all of the comments, feedback and even the criticism.
    Catch you on the next one!
    -Eric
  • Auta a dopravní prostředky

Komentáře • 1,6K

  • @theupscriber65
    @theupscriber65 Před rokem +925

    I was a manufacturing engineer on this motor. It appears to be pre-1999. The valve has a 1998 date stanp. The injectors were often replaced by the factory on the two rear passenger side cylinders because of customer complaints for noise. We sometimes used the marine injector. If the cam is original it's also pre-2000. We switched from an induction heat treat that did one lobe at a time and left that blue circle to one from Contour Hardening that treated the entire cam at once. I also noticed the shaft diameter has some severe chatter during the plunge turning operation (Op20) done on a specialized machine from a company called Crankshaft machine. Lastly the rods look to be the old 4130 forged rods with milled mating faces. Later models used powdered forged cracked rods. Most forged rods were made in Indianapolis, but several thousand were made by Kaiser Manufacturing in Germany while we transitioned to powdered forged rods. Those will habe a K stamped on the weight pad on the end of the rod cap. We did have some premature cam and litter failures because the lifter supplier didn't properly heat treat the roller tip but not many. It looks like a high mileage engine.

    • @Content7.3
      @Content7.3 Před rokem +86

      I’ve always wanted to talk to someone in the production of the 7.3

    • @Thedoug369
      @Thedoug369 Před rokem +16

      If you were a manufacturing engineer on this project, you'd know that it's an ENGINE. Teslas, Chevy Volts and your washing machine have MOTORS. Get it right Mr Engineer. Sorry, just a pet peeve of mine.

    • @Content7.3
      @Content7.3 Před rokem +218

      @@Thedoug369 he’s actually correct. Motor or engine are both correct. Same thing with a rocket. Rocket motor rocket engine. Have a little respect for the guy.

    • @SchmeedIsMe
      @SchmeedIsMe Před rokem

      @@Thedoug369 mo·tor [ˈmōdər] NOUN a machine, especially one powered by electricity or internal combustion, that supplies motive power for a vehicle or for some other device with moving parts.
      It's called General Motors....not General Engines. :)

    • @mjh912
      @mjh912 Před rokem +12

      This guy motors.

  • @joebartolomucci8870
    @joebartolomucci8870 Před rokem +175

    This is awesome. That was my fathers truck. He owned a plumbing business and commuted over 100+mile a day since he purchased it new. The only engine work that was ever performed was new injectors due to the fact they thru him the keys and never owning a diesel before didn’t know about the lever to empty the water from the fuel. It also had the oil pan and oil cooler changed. The Trans and front end was rebuilt once. The straps broke and dropped the gas tank on the e way once but other than cam sensors it was very reliable. The maintenance was done religiously with Rotella. My Dad passé two years ago. And man would he have loved to have seen this!!!!

    • @joebartolomucci8870
      @joebartolomucci8870 Před rokem +23

      Also the cluster went out about 2 years before the wreck so I would guess the true miles as closer to 800,000/850,000

    • @joebartolomucci8870
      @joebartolomucci8870 Před rokem +12

      Also once when it was having trouble starting a knucklehead lumbaryard mechanic used ether which is what probably damaged the piston.

    • @joebartolomucci8870
      @joebartolomucci8870 Před rokem +20

      I still have his ‘95 Lincoln Mk VIII with the 4.6 32v with 360,000 on the original engine. He always said oil was cheaper than engines…

    • @blk77sunshn
      @blk77sunshn Před 4 měsíci +5

      ​@@joebartolomucci8870This is really awesome ! Sorry about your Dad. He is absolutely right, cheap oil, expensive engine. You pick which one you want to replace. I think I'll change the oil. So much cheaper ! That's just awesome he got over 700,000 k miles on that old 7.3l Built Ford Tough !!!

    • @daciefusjones8128
      @daciefusjones8128 Před 3 měsíci +2

      my 97 has had rotella in it since 97. I was a truck driver and owner operator also and I always had rotella in all of them. A guy I worked for in 1974 and his mechanic showed me why I should too. they both had 40+ years in the business and knew their stuff.

  • @hotrod7938
    @hotrod7938 Před rokem +50

    I had a 350k miles 7.3 that I pulled the heads because I was curious. Bores looked just like those. The longevity of a 7.3 is legendary. Sad the EPA killed it.

  • @user-nd2wb7xd8x
    @user-nd2wb7xd8x Před 10 měsíci +20

    My 2000 F250 has 509,000 miles on it with the origional injectors. I ordered it new in june 2000. Raised 3 kids and still runs great.

  • @SilverloafGolf
    @SilverloafGolf Před rokem +894

    All I can say is that if I had 699,341 on the vehicle and that's where my journey with it ended I'd be EXTREMELY disappointed to not have gotten all the way to that 700k mark.

    • @scott8919
      @scott8919 Před rokem +70

      I would have pushed it the next 659.

    • @jessepitt
      @jessepitt Před rokem +67

      Seriously! I would have done anything to get those last miles. I have 390k on my 97 and I guarantee it will make 400k whether it likes it or not. It runs great so I’m not worried tho.

    • @skeptic669
      @skeptic669 Před rokem +2

      Right

    • @CrAzZyTheCodingBoss
      @CrAzZyTheCodingBoss Před rokem +7

      Had a fire transit 2.5 turbo with 398654 will make it to 999999 surely

    • @wannabeetiger
      @wannabeetiger Před rokem +10

      Should of used synthetic oil, and it would of made it pass 700,000 probably.

  • @MrPappypoke
    @MrPappypoke Před rokem +488

    I can tell you my 01 has 684000 miles right now and I drive it every day.
    It's had injectors, glow plugs, valve cover gaskets and water pump and various sensors replaced. Never had the oil pan or heads off.
    I just put a turbo on it and intend to drive it to 1000000!

    • @fearofchicke
      @fearofchicke Před rokem +3

      Are you running the stock pcm?

    • @BlarginBro
      @BlarginBro Před rokem +38

      More times than not the engines survive, the ford truck doesn’t lmao

    • @youngmike8645
      @youngmike8645 Před rokem +14

      I hope that glorious day comes for the old 7.3!!

    • @arfetherussian
      @arfetherussian Před rokem +6

      Please make a video

    • @abrahanflores9469
      @abrahanflores9469 Před rokem +8

      My 03 has 300k and still drives like new

  • @Captain-Awesome
    @Captain-Awesome Před rokem +19

    I am not a mechanic by any means, watching these engine break downs are just fun to watch.

  • @MrTay675
    @MrTay675 Před 9 měsíci +6

    the lack of junk all over the engine like these newer ones is amazing. so simple and so beautiful these older engines are.

  • @mausball
    @mausball Před rokem +418

    That's a 700,000 mile engine for sure. The bearing wear says those miles were all under load, it didn't idle it's life away. Very impressive it was as clean as it was inside.

    • @helgaairhead
      @helgaairhead Před rokem +38

      @mausball - Mate, you are dead on. I have done several off high mileage seven3’s and with proper maintainance - they look like this engine. Clean inside due to freequent oil changes They tend to trash the cam lobes and the upper rod bearing due to load and high mileage - tune and high rpm ( manuel transmission)
      I have one a the stand now - 252K miles for a refresh - its mint inside.

    • @Drmcclung
      @Drmcclung Před rokem +20

      The 4E (T444E - we just called them 4E's to differentiate from the old iDi 7.3) could definitely take a flogging and still get you there and all the way back.. They really were the Accord/Camry of diesels. Only 2 real ways I ever knew to genuinely hurt it was either running low on oil for way too long, or a lot of water through the injection system, and that was about it. The old iDi was really good too but had 1 or 2 things to watch out for that the 4E really didn't have. Lack of turbo on the old iDi made it a sh*t show pulling trailers uphill

    • @Me-zo8yc
      @Me-zo8yc Před rokem +2

      Interesting, thanks.

    • @rguy2684
      @rguy2684 Před rokem +22

      Absolutely Correct! There are many diesels that will go 700K. Just not the ones they now put in pick up's.

    • @hgghgguk
      @hgghgguk Před rokem +10

      that truck had to drive 112miles a day for 17 years straight to get to 700k in that time that truck had a hard life

  • @laveritesurlestemoinsdejeh8522

    Man, does that bring back memories. My first job as a mechanic, back in 2001, was in a shop that had the service contract on all the ambulances in that region (South shore of Montreal). And they all had 7.3's. Everything you did, with the exception of cam and crank removal, I have done on these engines. (We had a special tool to remove the injectors). And let me tell you something...if you think removing the heads was tough, try doing it in the enclosed space of the engine compartment of an E 350. That was one hell of a job. Now, in the shop where I work, word has gotten around that I have years of experience on the 7.3, so we have several customers who show up with their F350's because no one wants to touch them. To me, they're old buddies...always enjoy working on them for old times' sake.

    • @JohnSmith-yv6eq
      @JohnSmith-yv6eq Před rokem +35

      That works for you and the boss..
      boss can charge high prices because no one else will touch them..
      and you can do the work without comebacks.....

    • @Me-zo8yc
      @Me-zo8yc Před rokem +8

      I love a happy ending. 😃

    • @emilschw8924
      @emilschw8924 Před rokem +21

      And that is why having a worker with solid experience on something is always a good idea.

    • @eyerollthereforeiam1709
      @eyerollthereforeiam1709 Před rokem +9

      Montreal ambulances... They must have been run to hell and back!

    • @laveritesurlestemoinsdejeh8522
      @laveritesurlestemoinsdejeh8522 Před rokem +16

      @@eyerollthereforeiam1709 You have no idea. We inspected them every 7500km (4600 miles) and invariably there were at least 2 balljoints to change, brakes, tie rods very often, etc. The salt and the cold really did a number on them. Those manifold bolts on the video look awfully familiar...🤣🤣

  • @jimakin3541
    @jimakin3541 Před 10 měsíci +9

    I met a man who pulled travel trailers from the manufacturer to various dealers, he was driving a 1985 Ford F250 with the 6.9L diesel engine and a 4 speed manual transmission. At that time he had 999,973 thousand miles on his truck, and was leaving to poll another trailer.. Still running great.

  • @steverandall5814
    @steverandall5814 Před rokem +18

    This engine looks like it was worked hard but was also very well cared for. The uniform wear on the crankshaft journals, the cross-hatching still in the bores, the cleanliness of the aluminum front cover, the general cleanliness of the inside of the engine all suggest frequent oil changes using good quality oil and filters. I believe this is a 700,000 mile engine without a lot of idle hours. If was and idler and not a workhorse, you wouldn't see that type of wear on the crankshaft journals. This shows again what my Grandpa said: If you take good care of your equipment, it'll take good care of you.

  • @calyodelphi124
    @calyodelphi124 Před rokem +152

    I love how gentle you were with the water pump this time around. XD Your deadpan irony is top notch.

    • @laveritesurlestemoinsdejeh8522
      @laveritesurlestemoinsdejeh8522 Před rokem +4

      And with a broken one, to boot!!🤣🤣🤣

    • @robertwest3093
      @robertwest3093 Před rokem +4

      He walked it all the way to the table! I think he did that on purpose to see how many of us would notice lol.

    • @malachimarko7963
      @malachimarko7963 Před rokem +8

      Very opposite of his "this guide looks great" *yeets across shop*

    • @esstyx66
      @esstyx66 Před rokem +2

      @@malachimarko7963 I believe this is the heart of the joke - this time he said it looks terrible and babied it. Chefs kiss.

    • @carl2591
      @carl2591 Před rokem +2

      @@robertwest3093 ... vs the usual toss like a UPS driver on the steps.. LOL.. that was hilarious for sure..

  • @norcal715
    @norcal715 Před rokem +119

    Eric, I do not mind the longer videos! I kinda enjoy a deeper dive in to them. Thank you.

  • @Cartier_specialist
    @Cartier_specialist Před rokem +104

    I agree with your assessment. The truck was probably on a strict service interval and they were driving the wheels off the thing. I bet if you told most people that the heads on that engine weigh as much as a fully assembled Honda 4 cylinder they would doubt you. That engine needs to make a ton of torque just to haul itself around.

    • @pilsplease7561
      @pilsplease7561 Před rokem +2

      The entire engine in my car which is all aluminum weighs like 280 pounds thats the pentastar its so lightweight 2 reasonably strong guys could carry it

    • @MattyC62185
      @MattyC62185 Před rokem +2

      Yes, that engine weighs right around 1000 pounds by itself so heavy sucker twice as much as the gasoline V 10 in the same truck

    • @matthewwilliams9028
      @matthewwilliams9028 Před rokem

      Alot lighter than all the other power strokes the 6.7 is the heaviest.

  • @rickfowler5342
    @rickfowler5342 Před rokem +29

    "Put some heat on it " 😂😂😂 Well done, sir!
    I'm personally leaning towards the high mileage being accurate. These things are beasts

  • @thomasfletcher760
    @thomasfletcher760 Před rokem +158

    " this part looks good " , throws part , " this one looks smashed and bad " , gently lays it on the table 🤣🤣

    • @gwick358
      @gwick358 Před rokem +15

      Yeah Dragon Breath is like that.

    • @thomasfletcher760
      @thomasfletcher760 Před rokem +1

      @@gwick358 I think you have the wrong comment

    • @gwick358
      @gwick358 Před rokem +12

      @@thomasfletcher760 I'm trying to give Eric a new name. Dragon Breath.

    • @raddysurrname7944
      @raddysurrname7944 Před rokem +8

      I especially liked the part where he patted it.

    • @samholdsworth420
      @samholdsworth420 Před rokem +2

      Love Eric lol

  • @TomPauls007
    @TomPauls007 Před rokem +95

    I don't work on diesels, but I am amazed at how heavy-duty those pistons are! Mercy. That's a lot of mass flying around in there.

    • @lonniefreeman4278
      @lonniefreeman4278 Před rokem +20

      The pistons needs to be heavy duty. Diesels don't have sparkplugs to ignite the fuel. It uses high compression instead.

    • @fearofchicke
      @fearofchicke Před rokem +12

      @@lonniefreeman4278 the cup in the piston is where the magic happens.

    • @sparten17708
      @sparten17708 Před rokem +6

      @@coltoncavanaugh4614 all HD engines gas or diesel run slow. The diesels they race with rev fairly high and use lighter pistons

    • @jasper6761
      @jasper6761 Před rokem +10

      You gotta remember they dont rev NEAR as high. My 95 f250 (also with the 7.3 powerstroke) has a fuel cut as 3200 RPM.

    • @productions6994
      @productions6994 Před rokem +2

      ​@@lonniefreeman4278 yes they fire from the heat created by the compression. Had a 7.3 that was stolen from depot two years ago and miss it every day

  • @randr10
    @randr10 Před rokem +58

    I can believe it's a 700k mile engine. If it was a reman deal, at least 300K+ on it with that bearing and lifter wear. The crosshatching still being on those cylinders is a testament to how far lubrication engineering has come in the last 50 years. It used to be that 200k was considered an insanely high number to get out of an engine outside of something like a semi truck. Now we're seeing this engine might actually have 700k on it without any internal work needed. That's a damn impressive number.
    Something to note is that this was in a pickup and is an engine designed for a medium duty application (Think ~10-12k unladen weight, 18-26k loaded), so it's had a relatively easy life as far as load goes.
    Let's not forget about engineering. This was probably one of the last engines at International designed and built by the older generation who had the concept of quality (things like TQM) coursing through their veins from top of management down to the lowest guy on the totem pole, with some advancement in modern tech thrown in to spice things up. They way overbuilt it for the stock power level. Very similar to the engineering and manufacturing coming out of Japan in the '80s through early '00s (Toyota and Honda mainly). Their thought processes were in decades, not quarters, and it shows here. You can also see how that got thrown out the window with the 6.0L and 6.4L engines that followed this one. They were a disaster by comparison. The crazy thing is how much they had in common with the 7.3L, but they still managed to screw it up. I don't know anything about the corporate structure or management history at IH, but my guess is that there was a generational shift change that happened right around the time the 7.3 was being phased out. You need to have everyone in the organization knowledgeable about engineering (at least from a layman's perspective) to get quality products like this. Good engineers can't make high quality products by themselves. They need good management backing them up and the manufacturing side needs to be on point too.

    • @5.43v
      @5.43v Před rokem

      I know the lifters had the same part number and they both use HEUI but I don't know if they share that much

    • @redneckpyromania6965
      @redneckpyromania6965 Před rokem +10

      A lot of what went wrong was the rushed development of the 6.0 and trying to meet the ludicrous emissions standards imposed by the EPA i feel like the 6.0 could've been a great engine had it not been neutered with all the bullshit as they are great and reliable when egr deleted and bulletproofed

    • @Bloodcurling
      @Bloodcurling Před rokem +2

      It's Ford.
      Since Int'l only makes diesels, Ford can't blame International for the 3-Valve 5.4 gasoline engine, even if they want to like they did with the diesels. It's gasoline and they only make diesels.
      They're(5.4) not repairable, in comparison the GM Northstar can have the block threads repaired

    • @randr10
      @randr10 Před rokem +2

      I wasn't talking about the modular engines. This is about the International diesel V8s. Completely different conversation.

    • @Bloodcurling
      @Bloodcurling Před rokem +3

      @@randr10 You understood the reply wrong. Ford basically told International how to make the engine, then blamed them for it.
      If Fords own gasoline engine worked, and then Int'l's engines failed, then you could isolate the problem and say it's Int'l's fault, but one cannot

  • @LocoLouisB
    @LocoLouisB Před rokem +32

    My 2003 7.3 powerstroke had over 600,000 km (400,000 mi.) It was the cleanest engine inside that I had ever worked on. Couldn't get a white rag dirty wiping inside the valve covers with solvent. 7.3s had no EGR to pump pollution into the block or intake stream. Also it's best to run good old conventional oils as the detergents keep the soot in suspension and drop it out with each oil change. They also cannot be run low on oil as below 9 quarts in the pan there isn't enough oil to feed the HPOP, so they simply will not fire.

    • @screener545
      @screener545 Před rokem +1

      If your HPO res doesnt fill, you have no LPO either. You are still cranking dry.

    • @averyalexander2303
      @averyalexander2303 Před 7 měsíci +4

      @@screener545 Without the injectors firing, there won't be any combustion, so there will be no load, minimal heat, and not much stress on the internals. An engine will survive a LOT longer without oil pressure when being spun externally such as from being in gear or cranking than it will under an actual load. Considering the fact that engines can idle for hours and drive for 20+ minutes under load with no oil before failing, odds are good that if there was a total oil loss, just the residual oil left on the moving parts will protect them for the perhaps 30 seconds of 'run" time it might take the driver to pull over when the engine cuts out. An engine running under its own power is COMPLETELY different than being spun externally with no fuel supply and the oil film won't disappear as soon as oil pressure is lost.

    • @elliotkane4443
      @elliotkane4443 Před 7 dny

      The fact that the HPOP won't make pressure for the injectors if the oil level is low is such a maintenance dream, these engines are really great.

  • @gtpanoz
    @gtpanoz Před rokem +42

    This 2-part Powerstroke saga has more twists and turns than most Hollywood movies ever have.

  • @Junkyardnedreck
    @Junkyardnedreck Před rokem +28

    700k totally possible, I sold my old f350 flatbed w/ a 7.3 turbo a few yrs ago & it had 639k on it when I sold it, tranny had been replaced, but engine was original & it still ran great

    • @drg5352
      @drg5352 Před rokem +2

      My great uncle had one 7.3 that showed 614k when someone stole the turbo off it. I think it would have outlasted him otherwise. As it was, he was in no shape to be driving the thing when the turbo was cut off of it. Still he kept going though. He made it through Germany in 44/45, was 83 I think when he finally had a fatal heart attack.

  • @allenl9031
    @allenl9031 Před rokem +8

    Pour one out for the waterpump. Respect to you Eric for treating it with respect. It took the hit, to save the block.

  • @jamescole6846
    @jamescole6846 Před rokem +3

    59 and retired with a past history of just about everything mechanical but I still will watch just about any video I can click on no matter the content. Some for 30 seconds and some I will click through to see where it goes but I can say with out a doubt I watch every minute of your videos. The longer the better and there are only about 3-4 channels I do that with and I think it's because it's not just the content but because your a good character and seem like a great guy. Keep em coming.

  • @Bacongrease00
    @Bacongrease00 Před rokem +90

    Cam lobes have worn through the surface hardening. Not happening on a 70,000 mile 7.3 unless there was oiling issues. Bearings tell the story. The cracked piston was probably getting close to failing catastrophically. She’s definitely got some miles.

    • @chrismoore2906
      @chrismoore2906 Před rokem +14

      I'm going to bet the cracked piston is from someone shooting it with ether.

    • @elliottn8672
      @elliottn8672 Před 9 měsíci +4

      ​@chrismoore2906 tell that to peg and if you don't know who I'm talking about zip ties and bias ply on youtube he will use a hole can 😂

    • @jefferyepstein9210
      @jefferyepstein9210 Před 8 měsíci +2

      ​@@chrismoore2906
      Could be a bad injector as well

    • @JoshJackson13
      @JoshJackson13 Před 7 měsíci +4

      @@elliottn8672 double can it 🤣. Definitely a high mileage motor. You don't put new water pumps and valve cover gaskets on low mileage motors.

  • @donaldhoot7741
    @donaldhoot7741 Před rokem +25

    I do not like CZcams's idea of shorter and shorter videos. Are they trying to rival TikTok? I love hour long videos of interesting things. Great video, Mitsu 3CYL, PEACE!!!

  • @Mark-zz9rt
    @Mark-zz9rt Před rokem +5

    First time seeing a 7.3 tear down thanks for the education 👍
    Now I know why the engine’s are legendary in their reliability, super robust.

  • @509brown
    @509brown Před rokem +3

    The respect you show worthless parts says a lot. Not quite sure exactly what its saying, but its a lot! Love your videos, Eric!

  • @abpsd73
    @abpsd73 Před rokem +53

    Remove the spill spout at the top of the injector next to the connector before removing injector so you don't break them. Usually removing the lower bolt, sliding the retainer plate upward to clear the top bolt, then prying the bottom of the retainer plate gets them out unscathed.

    • @johndowe7003
      @johndowe7003 Před rokem +2

      @Kevin Stearns thanks for the heads up 👍

    • @dieselmunkey
      @dieselmunkey Před rokem +2

      I about shit when I saw him not pull both bolts...

    • @johndowe7003
      @johndowe7003 Před rokem

      @@dieselmunkey don't need to pull both plugs on the head.

    • @bobw7018
      @bobw7018 Před 5 měsíci

      That's precisely how I did mine when I had to re ring my injectors. That retainer also is a solid remover, and makes pulling injectors a LOT easier. I even got #7 and 8 with a much shorter prybar in the engine bay on mine. It's a true champion of an engine, no question about it.

  • @stephanebolduc6501
    @stephanebolduc6501 Před rokem +4

    Loved this longer tear down, thank you posting this!

  • @25vrd48
    @25vrd48 Před rokem +2

    I bought new and still own my 2003 7.3 Superduty with a 140000 miles . it's a rust free Arkansas truck . I'll keep the F250 crewcab probably until it gets too expensive for me to have repaired when it does need repair . Never been apart except for a waterpump . I learned so much from your teardown . Really awesome video that I've been waiting on for a long time . Great video .

  • @iamthemoss
    @iamthemoss Před 9 měsíci +2

    I have a 1996 F350 flatbed. I bought from a friend of mine who owns a diesel shop. He got the truck basically from a customer who ruined the motor. He replaced the motor (it was rebuilt by a shop in Cullman) and he put in a remanufactured E4OD transmission at 190K miles. I've had it for a few years. I love the truck, I use it but not abuse it, I don't have a business just some acreage. I have people ask me all of the time to buy it. I've only put about 15K miles on since I had it for 4 years. It should last me the rest of my life. It has such a sweet sound. I need to get the AC fixed.

  • @drones7838
    @drones7838 Před rokem +7

    watched the whole thing. as a tech who now sales insurance and mortgages. i really enjoy these. its like watching bob ross but for cars

  • @DudeStone
    @DudeStone Před rokem +4

    Longer videos are always welcome as long as the content and details are justified by any extra time keep it up highly enjoy watching

  • @brucebulger3150
    @brucebulger3150 Před rokem +1

    Your channel is great! It reminds me of my job at an US Army Aviation Intermediate Maintenance unit in Germany in the early 80s. We had a saying “ if we can’t fix it, we’ll fix it where nobody can”

  • @christophertstone
    @christophertstone Před rokem +8

    I was in the 70k camp before, but I think you're right, it's got 700k. Crazy how clean it is.

  • @andrewensign4481
    @andrewensign4481 Před rokem +22

    I don’t care how long your videos are, I have loved every one. I’m going with almost 700k. Keep up the great work. On a side note hope mom and baby are doing well. And congratulations on having another kid.

  • @dudebud72
    @dudebud72 Před rokem +1

    Always enjoyed that era 7.3. Used an F350 at work and always shined. Definitely earned all those miles for sure! Great video!

  • @rayshutsa6690
    @rayshutsa6690 Před rokem +1

    I like the longer video's you go into more in depth with the explanation on all the parts. As always another amazing job and video.

  • @danielmason244
    @danielmason244 Před rokem +11

    You’re funny with the “looks good” and throws part then “looks horrible” and gingerly walks it to the table 😂

  • @liquidalloy
    @liquidalloy Před rokem +4

    These engine teardowns are great btw. I love watching your videos :)

  • @THEGMDOCTOR-co9vp
    @THEGMDOCTOR-co9vp Před rokem +2

    love that you add humor into your vids awesome work brother keep it up never a dull video !!

  • @Hosenhoffen
    @Hosenhoffen Před rokem +2

    KEEP EM LONG LULZ! No but I love this show. It's a solid block of entertainment and laughs. I can't wait to see more. Always a highlight of my weekend and I think you might have the best job ever

  • @kathreyburn7012
    @kathreyburn7012 Před rokem +23

    I really like the longer, more in depth videos. Thanks for this one.

  • @Human-yd7mb
    @Human-yd7mb Před rokem +8

    Love 7.3s, you handled the heads perfectly , those loops up top are for moving them , I’ve always done them with a engine hoist , anyway good content

  • @robertlloyd7167
    @robertlloyd7167 Před rokem +1

    That's a high-mile workhorse. My '95 F-350 has 645,000 miles on it now and aside from a set of injectors, two sets of valve cover gaskets, three water pumps, an alternator, and a set of glow plugs has never been apart. Even the turbo's original. I've run Chevron Delo 15w-40 and NAPA Gold filters on 6,000-mile intervals since it was new and you could still eat cereal out of the valve covers. It's that clean inside. Oh, and it still gets 19 mpg on the highway. I have no complaints.

  • @coldwhiteguy
    @coldwhiteguy Před rokem +1

    That was a really fun watch, love those 7.3 engines, nicely done.

  • @jerrymunsch1349
    @jerrymunsch1349 Před rokem +11

    Geez that’s quite the talent you have. Never seen anyone that can heat steel with his breath. Keep up the good work I love your video’s. Very relaxing for me.

  • @emilschw8924
    @emilschw8924 Před rokem +10

    The skit with the waterpump had me laughing. Usually these get tossed without much ado, but this one get pampered as if it was something rare and special 🤣🤣🤣

    • @samholdsworth420
      @samholdsworth420 Před rokem +6

      If a part is good it gets thrown in the trash if a part is bad it gets treated like a baby

  • @CCAVANAUGH100
    @CCAVANAUGH100 Před 9 měsíci +4

    I worked at UPS for thirty years and we used this engine from 1997 to 2020 when I retired the last one in my fleet of package trucks the last one had 650,000 Milles on it I only retired it because the truck body was just to worn out to be safe anymore this was the original engine the only engine parts changed were the injectors fuel lift pump and water pump

  • @hurricanedt77
    @hurricanedt77 Před rokem +1

    I love your channel and I am thankful you started it.

  • @TykeMison_
    @TykeMison_ Před rokem +63

    The 7 liter powerstrokes can definitely handle a million miles when well cared for. We have a '99 F-550 at work with 285k on the clock, still runs like new. Overdrive went out last month (and she shifts hard as hell). The company mech hasn't been able to repair the trans except for a complete known-good-unit replacement. We're gonna miss Ol' Betsy if she has to go!

    • @jasonmurdoch9936
      @jasonmurdoch9936 Před rokem +8

      You can definitely toss her my way if y'all don't want her

    • @ViperMouse
      @ViperMouse Před rokem +5

      285k is a far cry from 700k. 350 miles a day for 365 days a year is ~125000 miles. There is absolutely NO WAY that vehicle did that for 7 years straight.

    • @thecloneguyz
      @thecloneguyz Před rokem +12

      MERCEDES OM647
      only engine I have seen REPEATEDLY break 1million miles OVER AND OVER again

    • @tredogzs
      @tredogzs Před rokem +1

      ur story of s broken down 285k isnt helping ur million claim...

    • @randr10
      @randr10 Před rokem +7

      Just get a reman from a good company and have him throw it in. They cost about the same as a set of injectors on a 6.7. No need to scrap such a good reliable truck over a transmission that can be easily replaced. I had mine (V10 but they use the same 4R100 trans) out and back in with the new one within a day's work.

  • @randywooldridge9064
    @randywooldridge9064 Před rokem +4

    You are a Good Man !
    Not seen much any more this day in time .
    Stay true to your self ,Thank you .

    • @EmbraceTheSuck
      @EmbraceTheSuck Před rokem +1

      Another good one to watch is Rainman Rays Repairs. Another one that’s honest as the day is long.

  • @richardjoochchang6449
    @richardjoochchang6449 Před rokem +2

    why are these teardown videos so relaxing for a sunday afternoon?

  • @finecutpost
    @finecutpost Před rokem +1

    Such a lot of work went into this video .well done and thx for sharing

  • @DaveBenson
    @DaveBenson Před rokem +6

    Best Saturday entertainment on CZcams!

  • @donw3912
    @donw3912 Před rokem +3

    With that cam that wiped out...700K for sure...as for the truck itself...it had a hard life for sure. A great video Eric:-)

  • @johnelliott7375
    @johnelliott7375 Před rokem +2

    I always watch and share the video you make and right off the bat that is the magic you have been working on because I am a mechanic and I have owned, worked on, and I know that just so far in you are making this look way too simple, but I am going to say that you are getting to the point of editing genius. Great day to 5on this Sunday morning.

  • @rydplrs71
    @rydplrs71 Před rokem +1

    It’s great waking up Sunday morning, and having a coffee while watching a tear down and waiting for the world to wake up.
    There’s a project waiting for me in the driveway afterwards.

  • @AMMO1Sarge
    @AMMO1Sarge Před rokem +3

    I totally agree with your assessment. There was a video of a fella tearing down a 900k 7.3 and it was in similar condition. They are just really tough low hp engines.

  • @mmrogowski
    @mmrogowski Před rokem +3

    Very interesting video. Not into this sort of thing but I now understand why repairs to diesel engines are expensive.

  • @_AndromedaGalaxy_
    @_AndromedaGalaxy_ Před rokem +1

    looking at that engine inside and out is exactly why i run lots of additives and keep the outside of my engines super clean as well. i want my engines to look like new the day they finally wear out.

  • @oldtanker4860
    @oldtanker4860 Před rokem +1

    Obviously a 2 day tear down as the shirt colors indicated. Seriously, I am darn impressed about the condition of the internals on that engine. I understand that class 7 and 8 trucks have engines that go to 1 million miles or more before an overhaul (some do, some don't) but I never expected a light duty engine like that one would go so far. Kudos to the owner who took care of it.

  • @t-yoonit
    @t-yoonit Před rokem +3

    Filling those cylinders with oil is common even when doing glow plugs. When we did my brother in law's 7.3 glow plugs I used a spray bottle sprayer with a long hose added on to evacuate the fluid to avoid hydrolocking it. We used the same trick a few years later to get all the oil out of a snow plow pump reservoir that had a stripped drain plug.

  • @rudolphna54
    @rudolphna54 Před rokem +10

    Very nice! Looks like a well used engine, though amazing how good the crosshatching can look with proper maintenance. I know you don't typically get VW/Audi engines in but would love to see a teardown of the 1.4 TSI or a 24V VR6. As well as a FCA 2.4L Tigershark or 1.4 Abarth engine

  • @Star_Gazing_Coffee_Lover

    Had a 99 Superduty, I had the first one in my town of the new design, I put 900000 on it all highway miles, then sold it to a friend, truck still looked new no rust, he rebuilt the engine, well over 1 million miles. Only problem I had with the truck was the auto locks front differential and recall on airbox for the filter. Did have injector change and routine maintenance and a crap load of tires.. I bought a new Dodge ram 3500 and as soon as warranty ran out I needed to have transmission rebuilt, made it bullet proof and ended up being a great truck minus the fast acting rust that the Ford never had. Both was used in hauling marine equipment and boats.
    7.3 was a beast!

  • @mattedward6155
    @mattedward6155 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I worked on a barn find truck a few months ago. 2002 7.3 dually with 40k miles. Beautiful truck. I can attest those down pipes are fun to do in the truck.

  • @stlchevy95
    @stlchevy95 Před rokem +4

    your editing gets better by the video 💯

  • @mobileu47
    @mobileu47 Před rokem +10

    Mine had lots of blow by is why I rebuilt it. Piston #5 has pieces fall off when it came out and #7 the compression ring land was deformed downward angle. Still fired up and ran everyday. E99 has AB code injectors a few CC's smaller than L99 which arr AD code. 94-01 73's are more desirable cause they have forged rods.... L99 has PMR rods.

  • @patcupolo9274
    @patcupolo9274 Před rokem +1

    The way and engineering that goes into designing these engines is amazing

  • @TheBeardedDog
    @TheBeardedDog Před rokem +1

    I have a 97 F350 with this engine and it was pretty cool to see how it comes apart. My parents bought the truck new and it was passed down to me. I hope I can get 700K miles from it, although I doubt I would drive it that much. Currently it has just over 100K miles and still running strong. I have only had to replace the vacuum pump and rebuild the AC compressor. It have been a very reliable truck.

  • @Lammergeier350
    @Lammergeier350 Před rokem +29

    Thank you! The 7.3 (and earlier 6.9 [nice]) has a long history of being one of the most reliable diesels available in a consumer-grade truck. This teardown makes it pretty obvious why: It is ridiculously overbuilt for the power it is expected to output. I suppose that's why, even in my shop, the valve cover gaskets and harnesses still have order points and regular stocking even after it has been discontinued for nearly twenty years. I have actually lost count of the million+ mile 7.3s that have crossed my counter over the years.
    Engine Requests:
    Ford: 300 Inline Six, Windsor, FE, 1.0 EcoBoost, 1.4 EcoBoost, 6.0 PowerStroke, 6.7 PowerStroke
    General Motors: 3100/3400/3800 Olds, LUW/LWE 1.8l i4, 5.7L Olds Diesel, L5P Duramax, L86 6.2 (shouldn't have too much trouble finding that one)
    Chrysler: Slant Six, MORE HEMIS, 1.4L FIRE, AMC 4.0/4.2
    Honda: B Series, D Series, K Series
    Toyota: 1LR-GUE (lol yeah right), 1GZ-FE, 1ZZ or 2ZZ
    Subaru: FJ series, EZ30/36

    • @JohnSmith-yv6eq
      @JohnSmith-yv6eq Před rokem

      Nissan A12, Nissan L16, Nissan 2.7TD....

    • @kevinwest432
      @kevinwest432 Před rokem +1

      buick 3.8 V6 made top 10 engines on the planet several times running.

    • @hondafrk
      @hondafrk Před rokem +4

      The 5.7 Olds Diesel would be cool to see, if he could find one lol.

    • @pisnotmynamesisnotmygame3757
      @pisnotmynamesisnotmygame3757 Před rokem

      Chevy ecotec II from the 2009 ish aveo. (Really a Daewoo) but I would still like to see it.

    • @Roost426
      @Roost426 Před rokem +2

      This 7.3 powerstroke and the 7.3/6.9 IDI are completely different engines, both are reliable though.

  • @lancenutter1067
    @lancenutter1067 Před rokem +3

    My 7.3 has 264,000 so far, and other than many accessories like water pump and ac unit and alternator, and some oil leaks it’s doing well. Darn good engines.

  • @spike555
    @spike555 Před rokem +2

    I'm a fleet manager, that was a service truck and it has 700k on it. Fleet managers and techs drive a lot. They take care of their tools, and their truck is the most important tool they have.

  • @mikenamys375
    @mikenamys375 Před 2 měsíci +1

    THANKS!!!!!
    S7 bricked with my teardown pics...this is gonna save me a ton of time...little stuff like water outlets, harness routing...perfect
    2002 Excurion
    THE OG 7.3

  • @markchapman2585
    @markchapman2585 Před rokem +3

    Love my 7.3 it has 576.000 km and still going strong but I did replace the transmission. Engine runs great but everything else around it is rusting away on me. Joy's of the rust belt. Great job 👍

  • @robertshelton3796
    @robertshelton3796 Před rokem +17

    5:45 "this thing looks terrible" (carries it gingerly away) LOL that's an inside joke for long time viewers thanks Eric

  • @hotwheelsracer6380
    @hotwheelsracer6380 Před rokem +19

    I like how you *breathe* on the bolts to *Heat them up* haha you must've had them new spicy hot peppers

  • @Enjoy_my_1st_Amendment
    @Enjoy_my_1st_Amendment Před rokem +2

    Love my 7.3 F250
    Bought a 70s model F600 with 4 speed split rear and a 16ft dump bed. 53k original miles, was an old grainer spent alot of time in the barn or doing occasional odd jobs, great interior and body. Doors close with the press of a finger, really nice truck.
    I've heard that pulling these gas torqers like the 330 that's in it and dropping 7.3 set up in them makes a good difference on older 600 series trucks.
    F250 sometimes cant bite because not enough weight for the torque especially in low 4x
    Would be interesting having another 12k pounds of traction on that 7.3 with the split rear 4 speed. I bet it could crawl about anywhere it could get a good bite.

  • @m0j0rising
    @m0j0rising Před rokem

    I know next to nothing about engines, yet found this video surprisingly cathartic.

  • @MTerrence
    @MTerrence Před rokem +3

    What a cool video! This whole engine screams "tough".

  • @ealy1180
    @ealy1180 Před rokem +3

    My BIL has an 01 Excursion with factory 7.3 on a 1 ton chassis. Bought it brand new (had 4 miles on it) and it now has 610k on it. We tore it down because 610k plus the Trans and T case needed work also. What you are seeing is high mileage and idle time. My BIL had never been opened up since new and it looked really similar just not as bad on the cams or rod bearings.

  • @Demonlord468
    @Demonlord468 Před rokem +2

    I have a 7.3L in a 1995 Super duty service truck with an IMT truck body and crane that 10K short of rolling over 400K and it still runs like a clock. Those engines are legendary for their reliability and ability to break well over a half millions miles without a sweat just as long as you keep the oil changed pretty much. Oil changes being the most important of all since it not only protects the engine but also all the parts in and around the fuel system including the injectors all of which are very expensive if any of them fail. And bad oil is what causes failures in the HPOP System on those engines the majority of the time.

  • @JBK647
    @JBK647 Před 6 měsíci

    Very entertaining to watch. Your camera work is really good and clear.

  • @GrumpyMarine1978
    @GrumpyMarine1978 Před rokem +3

    I drove one with 1.5 million miles on it. It was still running strong when was pulled. They are resilient engines.

  • @fogeyes
    @fogeyes Před rokem +7

    Very much enjoyed. Thanks. I won't let go of my 1996 f350 7.3 even though hardly use it no more. 1996 with 98500 miles actual odo. Only issue is small rear main seal leak (mechanic in bottle not really helping) but its real slow leak only when running and hot.

    • @brendawernicke7663
      @brendawernicke7663 Před rokem +1

      Are you sure its not leaking down from the turbo pedestal? There is a drain hole in the block to let liquids run down behind the flywheel or flex plate.

    • @fogeyes
      @fogeyes Před rokem +1

      @@brendawernicke7663 Well It seems dry up there but wet at rear of engine. But I;ll take a closer look tomorrow. Thanks

    • @snoopytheace4487
      @snoopytheace4487 Před rokem +2

      @@fogeyes if that mechanic in bottle is a stop leak for the oil, expect to have a lot of oil leaks. I've seen people use that stuff and I usually end up replacing every oil seal on the engine.

    • @fogeyes
      @fogeyes Před rokem

      @@snoopytheace4487 Oops! i put three 16 oz bottles in it 1000 miles ago. i used Bar's Leaks Rear Main Seal Repair, after oil change. Guess I'll change oil again. Thanks.

  • @DrMGomezJr
    @DrMGomezJr Před 10 měsíci +1

    Although I retired as a school superintendent and a university teacher, I did my own maintenance on our private vehicles and helped my brother doing maintenance on his airplanes which he used in his fumigating business...When I joined the U.S. Airforce, I went through formal training in aircraft maintenance...I trained myself to work on BT-13s, N3s, and other lighter aircraft...I trained on the B-25 and B-26...I then trained on the B-36, B-47, B-52, and other aircraft...I worked on the Canberra and the XC-99 as well...To make a long story short, I still tinker with anything mechanical, but most of all, I watch videos of other folks, such as you, take different engines apart...I thoroughly enjoy that and will continue to watch your videos and those of others until who knows when...By the way, my brother, a WWII veteran was a licensed instructor pilot, in different kinds of aircraft including helicopters, and he took time to teach me to fly...

  • @tonychavez2083
    @tonychavez2083 Před rokem +2

    Bearings look about what I would expect from a 500K mile + motor. All components look very stout! I guess that’s because of it’s I.H. Navistar background. Awesome video, thank you..

  • @areitu
    @areitu Před rokem +10

    I always save the longer videos as a Sunday morning watch activity and don’t mind at all!
    The hairline crack in the bore at 45:18 might be an indication of cavitation pitting the cylinder liner from the cooling jacket. It can happen with on any diesel engine (especially with the non turbo 7.3 IDI) if the additive levels in the coolant aren’t properly checked and maintained over its lifetime.
    From what I understand it may be repairable by boring out the cylinder and pressing in a new sleeve
    Disclaimer: I own a truck with the non PS 7.3 IDI but I am not a professional tech so I’m armchair guessing and defer to people who do work with the PS 7.3 if I’m wrong about anything

    • @honkhonkler7732
      @honkhonkler7732 Před 10 měsíci

      That was more a problem on the IDI than the PS. They're completely different engines of the same displacement.

  • @Jasminethelovelycat
    @Jasminethelovelycat Před rokem +11

    Definitely a workhorse of an engine!

  • @Ghauster
    @Ghauster Před rokem +1

    We had over 400k on an 88 non-powerstroke 7.3. It still ran good. Transmission was never apart. We did put head gaskets in at about 300k. Clutch was about every 4 years. Rarely because the clutch was bad but the clutch plate would rust up and destroy the throw-out cylinder. After 20 years of great service. We gave up trying to keep the body together. Used it as a farm truck for a couple more years and then sent it to scrap.

  • @ztj-vv9zp
    @ztj-vv9zp Před rokem

    I just bought a power stroke 7.3 with 603,000 miles runs drives shifts stops fine it's an amazing truck can't wait to see this video lol

  • @budgreen4x4
    @budgreen4x4 Před rokem +5

    For those rusty exhaust bolts, I have had huge success with the Irwin extractor sockets, they bite hard on even fully rounded heads

  • @starkindustries26
    @starkindustries26 Před rokem +17

    They will run with a cracked piston it will just push all that compression into the crankcase. Love the vid and I would totally get that as a builder if I was local. I have 2 7.3 powered trucks and they both have 250k+ and still run great

  • @Val-xi4we
    @Val-xi4we Před rokem +2

    2003 7.3L with 445k miles here. owned since 40k miles. Never had the valve covers off. Only major component replaced is the turbo at 400k miles and it was not because the turbo was bad. I just was not putting a 400k mile part back on when I was fixing a oil leak. Still running original ECM, original injectors, original HPOP, original glow plugs, original transmission. Obviously things like the water pump, alternator, starter have been replaced but those are wear parts. oil changed every 5k and trans fluid drained and topped off every 30k with full pan drop and filter every ~100k.

  • @kris-english
    @kris-english Před rokem +1

    I admire you work my brother!

  • @MushieDetails
    @MushieDetails Před rokem +3

    Been on a engine teardown kick today and I gotta say I love the comic relief whenever you blow on the engine after cutting away from the heat. Good video!

  • @Trump985
    @Trump985 Před rokem +6

    When working on diesels lifting equipment is you friend! I remember trying to get a 671 Detroit head down a ladder into a boats engine room. Even with 2 of us I thought for sure I was going to blow out my back. I think the 671/12v71 head is well over 200 lbs it really sucks to deal with.

    • @thomasfletcher760
      @thomasfletcher760 Před rokem +1

      6-71 Detroit , main engines in an lcm 8 ( landing craft mechanized for those who don't know ) US Army , watercraft engineer ( formerly )

    • @stevebot
      @stevebot Před rokem +1

      Intertubes say 238# with valves, 320# with rockers, bridges and followers. Makes my back hurt just thinking about it.

  • @patrickmorrissey2271
    @patrickmorrissey2271 Před rokem +2

    Great job.
    Great call to tear it apart.... Looks like 700k, I agree. 700k is impressive.
    I'm still baffled by the mileage discrepancy.... I guess we have to presume some variation of cluster swapping....

  • @jjcaruso44
    @jjcaruso44 Před rokem

    Another good job and great video. Thanks