hawk43
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Dec 27, 2019
- Threads
- 2
- Messages
- 126
- Reaction score
- 199
- Location
- South Carolina
- Vehicle(s)
- 2019 Ford Ranger XLT
Possibly. Something of interest would be to determine not only the dilution percentage of the fuel in the oil, but also the amount of metal content per PPM. An engine with this much fuel in the oil would certainly have more metal content due to the highly irregular reduction in viscosity. Truly the only way to determine this would be a head to head comparison of two oil samples. One from a vehicle that exhibits the excessive overfill condition and one that does not. A baseline would have to be established to prove anything. Not completely impossible but for certain Ford Engineering would need to collect their own data well before establishing a TSB. I for one have not experienced this on my Ranger. I'm nearly on my second oil change. We are also keeping a close eye on my Stepfather's new Ranger. He's right at 5k on the clock with no signs of this issue. Doesn't mean it may not present itself in the future. However, this is an important thread to follow. All good info here. I for one would keep this real simple with my dealership. The oil level is increasing and you need to fix it period.
In my opinion any raw fuel in the oil is unacceptable.
Sponsored
. It is night and day difference from my other two vehicles too....but the oil level look good. almost 2k miles.
It does make me feel a little better knowing your eco's all smell "similar" but the same would have been more better....