BlackWidow
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Wanted to post my experience here since Ford wants to charge almost $3000 for something that can be fixed with $30 and some time. Over the weekend my Wife had water splash on her feet when we were driving. It was particularly worse when turning left. When I got home I took a look at the AC blend box from the passenger side and noticed it dripping water. I called my local Ford dealer and explained the situation, since I was out of warranty they presented me with 2 options, drop the tranny or pull the dash, both upwards of $3000.. I took it to a local shop and their suggestion was to cut a hole in the blend box to create space to clear out the clog and seal it back up. Faced with these options, I was leaning towards the latter but before I take drastic measures to fix the issue I wanted to take a crack at it myself. I was able to find some Ranger owners in Australia with the same issue, they recommended drilling a hole after the blower and before the evaporator then spraying coil cleaning foam into the unit and letting it work its magic. I was ready to drill a hole when I looked on the driver's side and noticed the Evap Temp sensor harness is held in place by a mount that when removed gives you an access hole large enough to get a pick, water, or cleaner right by where the drain is. I tried the cleaner, but it didn't work, I tried a shop vac and that didn't work, next was air. I had a blow gun with a 12-inch extension on it, I bent it to allow me access to the drain. I was able to get the nozzle into the bottom right-hand corner and work my way left, blowing air every quarter inch. Finally a gush of water out the bottom of the truck. Although this fix worked for me I recommend caution when attempting. You are right up against the eval coil and you run the risk of damaging it and then you will have to spend thousands to pull the dash and replace it. I've attached photos to assist anyone else having this issue, the drain is in the most inconvenient location bound to have issues after the warranty period. I also posted a photo showing the sensor hole location in relation to the drain, you can see there is about a 3/4" to a 1" of spacing between the evap and the bottom of the blend box allowing you to get an air gun in there. I would strongly advise resorting to picks as a last resort, you are in there blind and the risk of damaging the coil is too great. Good luck!
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