- First Name
- Jay
- Joined
- Nov 14, 2022
- Threads
- 2
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- 272
- Reaction score
- 465
- Location
- New England
- Vehicle(s)
- 2023 Bronco Wildtrack
- Your Bronco Model
- Wildtrak
Best of luck to you.But I’m wasting my time.
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Best of luck to you.But I’m wasting my time.
Not crazy, judging by the water line pic it might have been what, 20-25%? And given that it now had an extra amount of water in the oil I'd say it was pretty full lol.How steep of an angle was the Bronco sitting in the water? Was it steep enough that the oil pick up was sucking air while it ran?
Well lookie there, ain’t that something…….There were photos, posts, et al in this other thread ... which, as it appears, were later edited away.
https://www.bronco6g.com/forum/threads/how-tough-is-this-thing.79465/
Sorry OP for your troubles but it does seem like there is an attempt at narrative building going on here.
We are clearly done here. Haven't had a worthwhile or helpful post in a few pages. At the time of that post the only thing wrong was the alternator. Somebody actually helped and pointed to a TSB. Try to imagine what it must be like to be helpful!Well lookie there, ain’t that something…….
Thanks for sharing that; helps with my suspicions. Think we’re done here.
We are clearly done here. Haven't had a worthwhile or helpful post in a few pages. At the time of that post the only thing wrong was the alternator. Somebody actually helped and pointed to a TSB. Try to imagine what it must be like to be helpful!
I guess I'm the only person on here to have water sucked into an engine, not via intake?We are clearly done here. Haven't had a worthwhile or helpful post in a few pages. At the time of that post the only thing wrong was the alternator. Somebody actually helped and pointed to a TSB. Try to imagine what it must be like to be helpful!
Try not to take to heart some of these people that have NEVER been mudding, who are scared to death to hit a widdle mud hole, never actually got water in an air filter or intake, never got muddy water in an airbox, actually think an oil seal needs to be leaking to get water bypassed into a sealed oil repository, etc...Apparently you didn’t see the picture of the airbox with a few splatters of water in it and the clean filter. Look at that water and tell me it wouldn’t leave an actual water line in the air box? Or on the filter. Or the air intake tube that didn’t have one sign of water entry. But I’m wasting my time. Think what you want to think. As I’ve said, others have been helpful and I’m thankful for that.
Well, if f you do this all the time, with some rigs un-snorkled, you know that airbox of the OP is pretty darn clean, when you are talking the realm of water and muddy water airbox/intake ingestion.I’ve filled a 53 m38a1 f134 with water and here’s a functioning snorkel on a Cummins 4bt…..
I said it in an earlier post. The filter in the photo has never seen a drop of water…. But then again is that the filter that was on it when it sunk?
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It’s the original filter, all you have is my word on it. And I posted before but this is the original air tube leading from it![]()
The most frustrating thing is the dealer isn’t letting me talk to the mechanic that said it inhaled water, or the field engineer that is supposed to look at it. Or rather strongly suggesting that it would hurt my case. My thoughts are that they NEED to know the circumstances to know they have to dig deeper. If they knew it ran fine but there was water in the oil then they might try harder. I guess they don’t care because it’s not their $10,000 on the line.
This^^^^^Many years ago buddy of mine got his '80 FSB stuck bad in a really deep mud hole, and he had made the mistake of wheeling solo w/passengers. After hours of trying to get it out, and calling everyone w/a 4x4 that he could reach to help, he had no choice but to leave it sit overnight. Now this was a MUCH higher mileage 302, but that is exactly what happened to him. Overnight the oil pan filled w/water seeping in from either the rear main or front seal or both. Next day we got it recovered, but the oil was filled w/water. It took at least 3x 5qt drain pan loads to drain it. The engine did run ok after that, but never had acceptable oil pressure again. He ended up getting it rebuilt some months later, but w/the miles it already had, it was pretty tired to begin with. All those old windsors leaked at least a little oil, and the golden rule of fluids (I guess) is if it can leak out, it can also leak in!