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Ecoboost Exhaust Manifold replacement notes

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34K views 62 replies 20 participants last post by  hatchet  
I lucked out with that last fall. Had a valve cover bolt break. Not particularly centered well though -- fortunately not a critical area, just keep the oil inside and the dirt outside. Exhaust manifolds and tight areas are their own joy.
 
Sounds like I need to look up a factory manual. And watch more videos (there is a youtube channel for 'med tech' that works on Transit ambulances). I'm sure I could figure it all out, just need to look at price vs my time.
 
I was wondering: does the subframe (below the transmission) need to come out if the engine and transmission were coming out the front? I suspect it would. Likely too much in the way. Or too much that has to be unbolted to get away with that.

Just thinking that comments made above about how much is already removed from the front of the truck that it's not a lot farther to pull it out. In my case, I know a transmission is in the near future. Two birds with one stone and all that (transmission, manifolds/studs; intake bolts?). Wouldn't leave much that I have seen rise to the 'PITA' level.
 
Oh boy. To get the left side coolant line off the head, I tried building a 19mm socket with a slit in it (like an O2 sensor socket) to fit over the fitting with its line still connected. But I couldn’t turn it enough to use it all the way. So I think I may have loosened it the initial fraction of a degree with that contraption. Or not. But then I used the very tip of an open ended wrench at an angle to unscrew the fitting the rest of the way, the tiniest turn at a time.
All this was totally by feel, with my chest lying on the intake manifold and my feet on the bumper beam suggestively straddling the radiator. It took hours. There has got to be a better way.

I should have carefully measured it, but there is about 5.5” of clearance to get a drill and bit and jig onto the rearmost left stud, perpendicular to the head/manifold mating surface. That wasn’t enough space for me to get a right angle drill and a 3.5”-long “H” drill bit in unless I put the bit in the jig before tightening the bit into the drill chuck. The shorter bits Promaxx includes did fit. A proper 1/4” ratchet with a chuck in it might fit too, but I only had a 1/2” and the socket adapters made it too long.

Did that make better sense?
Yes, thank you. One more, you were replacing the cooling lines? Could you have just cut it off then worried about it once it was out of the way and you had more room? Or would that have not given enough room to matter? I haven't taken a look at that area, so I don't have an appreciation for the space limitations.
 
OxfordComma,

What di dyou do to get the other coolant line jiffy clamp off?

Oh, and this one "There is enough space to get a drill into the rearmost left side stud, the tightest one, but only with a short drill bit like Promaxx includes. A 3.5" long jobber bit needed to go into the jig first, then be tightened into the drill chuck. "

Did you mean "if you use a 3-1/2" jobber drill bit, then...."?

Thanks, because I expect to be in there at some point. Mine is at 203k, and giving signs of a pending transmission failure. The only quote I have so far (transmission shop) is ~$6500, includes a new sub frame and whatever else breaks.
 
No idea. Not sure the drill bushings cost. But I would think that (given the frustrations of drilling out broken/frozen studs) a hard enough nut might be a pain to drill through.