Stangman570
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- May 31, 2019
- Threads
- 21
- Messages
- 404
- Reaction score
- 1,030
- Location
- Florida Panhandle
- Vehicle(s)
- 2019 Ford Ranger 4x4 XLT Sport
Yes, my direct experience over the years of moding na and boosted Mustangs. Racing 1/8th and 1/4 mile tracks. It's all relative and inherent to boosted applications that cant be avoided. Foot to floor = more boost. More boost = increased cylinder pressures. More cylinder pressures = more blowby of the cylinder rings thereby = more fuel deposits into the crank case on a molecular level. That's one way, not even discussing the PCV route that can occur as well. My na applications would as well but over a greater period of time as the ole suck, squeeze, bang was under lower cylinder pressures.. I have personally witnessed on of my boosted 4.6l with a cracked ring on cylinder 4 and cylinder 3 with a hammered piston run for another 6 months at highway speeds after I took the supercharger off. Would not build compression on cylinder 4 at idle but would with increased RPM. I had a bet with a friend how long it would run while I built the next engine. I won, dang lil 4.6 never let go however, yes the oil wreaked of fuel.So are you implying that boosted vehicles will have a ‘fuel’ smell in the oil? Lol.
But I will say the level has stayed the same. I drove the heck out of her over the weekend.
Perfect that yours didn't increase the oil level. Trust me I'm still keeping an eye on my Ranger as well. I'm not saying that the Rangers don't have an issue as others have stated in this thread. The only way to gauge it is by oil level as each person's olfactory is different and not an accurate gauge if something is truly wrong.
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Why I don't take anything to the dealer that I can do myself. I'd have insisted that they drain the oil, install new oil and a new oil filter. Their mistake, they should have corrected it.