she should be fired or find a gov job. I've previously posted this sevice sob story handy, my interaction was with the Saab dealership service mgr :Update: The dealer service consultant is upset with me for ratting her out to corporate about this being an issue caused by "off-roading". She told me not to tell corporate that I've "off-roaded" before and I told them that she told me thatMaybe I shouldn't have. I dunno if I screwed myself by doing that... the suggestion that off-roading or tire sizes caused this just seemed so ridiculous that I had to mention it. They've put in warranty request with corporate. Might take a few days for that to process with a decision.
More info: the tech used a bore scope and saw head gasket failure and extensive scoring on cylinder walls. No cooling fan issues.
A sob story at SAAB. Classic.she should be fired or find a gov job. I've previously posted this sevice sob story handy, my interaction was with the Saab dealership service mgr :
TB failure occurred while traveling from Denver to Buff, cruising around 55 and punched the gas pedal to pass and CEL lights up, boost and rpm were limited but continued on the journey to Buffalo NY before checking in with a local dealer. This is where one of my more memorable SAAB experiences occurred, while waiting on the repair I asked the service mgr if they see a lot of TB failures, at that time my car was under 20k miles. He replied - "no they never fail unless you are using cheap gas like they sell on the Seneca Indian reservation"
I assured him I wouldn't use that gas - but actually I have always when visiting WNY because my in laws had a cottage a short drive from the Seneca Indian reservation where no taxes were levied so yes cheaper gas . But couldn't believe a service mgr would say something so incorrect on several levels, I had to conclude that maybe he had relatives at the Little Big Horn. Got my car back and got out of that place.
I had a similar experience at the dealership from the sales desk to the finance desk.Marketing: look at all the fun and adventurous things you can do with a Ranger.
Warranty: You actually bought a Ranger and did those things?! Claim denied
Wow! Stoke is different?That's what I thought...asides from differing physical connections, Ranger's 2.3 is tuned for torque and I think crank/stroke is different...
Then maybe she should have kept her ignorant pie hole closed and kept the assumptions about what "caused" the issue to herself.Update: The dealer service consultant is upset with me for ratting her out to corporate about this being an issue caused by "off-roading".
I'm not the best photoshopper lolI had a similar experience at the dealership from the sales desk to the finance desk.
Sales desk: This truck is bullet proof, man. You could do jumps with it. I do with mine all the time!
Finance desk: Really, without these 3 warranties... what you have there is not a Ford Ranger, it's a hand grenade.
Correction:Wow! Stoke is different?
So that implies the turbos are different?The 2.3L EcoBoost engines in the Ford Ranger (270 hp/310 lb-ft) and Mustang (310-330 hp) share the same 3.45-inch (87.5 mm) bore and 3.7-inch (94 mm) stroke, producing 2.3L displacement
. The main differences are tuning and hardware: the Ranger uses a twin-scroll turbo for low-end torque, while the Mustang emphasizes higher RPM power.
yeah this was a 2004 Saab - Saab started using EFI back in the early 70s , no fuel touch the throttle body.s
A sob story at SAAB. Classic.
Hoping for good news.Update: I talked to Ford corporate customer service and they were more helpful than the dealer service woman. They are working with the dealer to have them do a tear down and diagnose further than just reading codes. They said that I might possibly qualify for some help in getting warranty pricing instead of normal customer pricing on a fix. Crossing my fingers because this is a really financially unfortunate time for me personally to have to replace this engine or take a huge loss and buy a new vehicle![]()
I would assume the turbo could be different but I am betting the cams and intake manifold may be different as well.Correction:
AI Overview
The 2.3L EcoBoost engines in the Ford Ranger (270 hp/310 lb-ft) and Mustang (310-330 hp) share the same 3.45-inch (87.5 mm) bore and 3.7-inch (94 mm) stroke, producing 2.3L displacement
. The main differences are tuning and hardware: the Ranger uses a twin-scroll turbo for low-end torque, while the Mustang emphasizes higher RPM power.
It is literally an Off Road model!Thanks, I am planning to call Ford corporate sometime today.
The Ford dealer service lady told me that they "saw signs of off roading"... that there was "bits of mud underneath the vehicle" and that this or having non-stock tires was the likely cause for my engine failure... seriously WTF??
I don't even take this thing off road very much and the stuff I do is mostly mellow fire roads... She kept re-iterating this off-roading point and that I should not mention that the truck had "been off road" when I call corporate...
I literally made this exact comment to her... The name of the truck has the word "Off Road" in it. lolIt is literally an Off Road model!Good luck to the dealer trying to prove the tires or the surface they came in contact with somehow damaged your motor.
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Still a big difference, but not block, bore, or stroke differences. I really had no idea, but figured Ford was too cheap to build multiple base engine platforms... but with Ford, anything could happen!Correction:
AI Overview
The 2.3L EcoBoost engines in the Ford Ranger (270 hp/310 lb-ft) and Mustang (310-330 hp) share the same 3.45-inch (87.5 mm) bore and 3.7-inch (94 mm) stroke, producing 2.3L displacement
. The main differences are tuning and hardware: the Ranger uses a twin-scroll turbo for low-end torque, while the Mustang emphasizes higher RPM power.