FINALLY! A "Bad" Ford 4.9L 300 Straight 6 To Teardown! Most Reliable Engine, Ever?

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  • Опубліковано 10 лют 2023
  • To buy parts or peruse our inventory, please visit www.Importapart.com or email us at Importapartsales@gmail.com.
    If this is the first time you've found the channel or the first teardown video you've seen, there are over 110 more teardowns here: • Blown Up Engine Tear D...
    You have asked, and I have been looking for almost 2 years! FINALLY, I get a Ford 4.9L 300 in as a core. I've had a LOT of requests for one of these, and I had a few things working against me. They're all old now, and since we unfortunately use rock salt to treat the roads in my area, many of these trucks rusted away a long time ago. As well, the 300 is one of the most reliable engines produced, and thus has no core value so many yards don't save them.
    I was at the right place at the right time! This engine was sitting in a core pile at a local salvage yard. I presumed it was locked up because I couldn't turn the flywheel with my foot. It was pretty banged up from being in that pile,, a lot of the front of the engine was broken. Didn't care, it was worth digging out the pile just to have it on the channel.
    Its really amazing how simple these engines were. Low stress, Low tech, and high mileage for most. These engines were used in more than just Ford trucks and cars. They were used as stationary engines, sandblasters, generators, car crushers, pumps... I've even seen them in old construction equipment.
    Really hope you enjoyed this teardown! As always I love all of the comments, feedback and even the criticism.
    Catch you on the next one!
    -Eric
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,5 тис.

  • @RichM3000
    @RichM3000 Рік тому +380

    Great video. I have some ideas on how to improve the channel:
    1: A cool theme song.
    2. Have a couple of assistants who generally like each other but fight a lot. That would give it some drama.
    3. Find a way to manufacture deadlines so give the teardown urgency, like Jesse James did. Maybe an important client breathing down your neck or something.
    4. Maybe speed through some of the more mundane parts of the teardown, for more time to develop the interpersonal relationships of the new staff.
    5. Add sponsors. Viewers like that because it shows businesses want to be a part of your channel.
    6. Have a rivalry with a local shop.
    7. Lots of cool graphics.
    8. Have a score for the damage, like the Doug score.
    /s
    Just kidding! Don't change anything.

    • @I_Do_Cars
      @I_Do_Cars  Рік тому +161

      I read the list like No, Nope, Nah, No.... ha!

    • @RichM3000
      @RichM3000 Рік тому +19

      @@I_Do_Cars Thanks. Glad you liked it. 😆 You can always pin it for a good laugh, or even to generate feedback (though most everyone loves the current format.).

    • @LittleLadyLidbetter
      @LittleLadyLidbetter Рік тому +41

      Ha ha, I was ready to reply with molten lava over this comment. Well played, sir. Eric, please keep up the great work!

    • @RichM3000
      @RichM3000 Рік тому +11

      @@LittleLadyLidbetter Thanks! Maybe I should have waited six weeks though, for April 1st. :)
      Jesse James and Paul Teutul Sr. probably pitched Stacey David-style build shows before network execs gave them similar "improvements".

    • @sodderbridge
      @sodderbridge Рік тому +35

      Serious narrator voice: "If he can't remove this 10 mm bolt before deadline, he could lose millions of dollars".

  • @bobbyvarnell9350
    @bobbyvarnell9350 Рік тому +701

    One of the most reliable engines ever built, I’m not even a Ford guy, and I have a ton of respect for this engine.

    • @rydplrs71
      @rydplrs71 Рік тому +13

      It didn’t love it it just did it.

    • @wilburfinnigan2142
      @wilburfinnigan2142 Рік тому +63

      Seven main bearings gear drive cam the way engines use to be built !!! FORD TOUGH !!!!

    • @wickedcabinboy
      @wickedcabinboy Рік тому +15

      @@wilburfinnigan2142 - Kinda tough to argue with you there.

    • @edifyguy
      @edifyguy Рік тому +36

      These engines were meant to be run forever. They were built accordingly.

    • @wickedcabinboy
      @wickedcabinboy Рік тому +8

      @@edifyguy - That seems to be the consensus. Do you think someone would be just crazy enough to attempt a rebuild? Would it even be worth the effort?

  • @jimmotormedic
    @jimmotormedic Рік тому +60

    That is a typical 300. What happened is the truck fell apart around the engine and then the owner neglected the engine and then finally it over heated. I'm pretty sure it was running when pulled.. I've seen bearings in a 300 that were worn way more than that and they were still working all day. Great engine never to be seen again. The Ford 300 engine never dies, they are killed!

  • @mec7568
    @mec7568 Рік тому +230

    It's amazing how Ford invested in all the updated manifolds and bracketry to keep this workhorse going through the late 90s.

    • @johnt.848
      @johnt.848 Рік тому +21

      "invested" or saved a ton of money on design and retooling a new engine?

    • @1SqueakyWheel
      @1SqueakyWheel Рік тому +15

      ​@@johnt.848 Both.

    • @davelowets
      @davelowets Рік тому +9

      Why is that amazing?
      Do you think it would be cheaper to design an entirely new engine from scratch, INCLUDING the new manifold and bracketry? 🤦🏻
      C'mon, McFly... THINK.

    • @davelowets
      @davelowets Рік тому +1

      @@82f100swb Ack, I dont buy that shit at all...
      Why would they care if it would "outrun the 302"?
      IF there is any crossflow factory ford pieces laying around, and IF they are a real trial effort by Ford to dig into the straight 6, then it was determined for whatever reason that it wasn't worth it re-tool the entire line up of exhaust manifolds, intakes, bracketry, exhaust pipes, and whatever else. IF it was that good, they certainly would have done it.

    • @82f100swb
      @82f100swb Рік тому +9

      @@davelowets The heads were cast to use existing manifolds, no bracketry bolted to the head itself. Go over to fordsix and search it up. All the info is there from Greg.
      As for the reasoning, what would be the incentive to buy the optional V8 if the base engine made more power?

  • @fredwalt2282
    @fredwalt2282 Рік тому +34

    I am the original owner of a 1979 Econoline with the 300 I6.
    Hated it when people said 4.9
    When was the last time you saw an original four on the floor van.
    First vehicle I ever bought new.
    Almost 300,000 miles and never removed the valve cover.
    She’s my baby now with vintage car plates !!!
    We’ve grown old together. 🤓👍

    • @brian5o
      @brian5o 3 місяці тому +1

      My stepdad had a 79 E150 with a 300-6 and 3-on-the-tree. It was made into a conversion van before companies that did that.
      If I could find it today, I’d buy it in a heartbeat. It wasn’t a perfect van, my family camped in it once when it was Rand our tent leaked and our van did, too.
      If I found that van today and had the ability, I’d buy it.
      I love vans, especially with manuals and I really love 3-speeds on the column.
      [X][X] []
      Hopefully….. Long live the manuals.

    • @brian5o
      @brian5o 3 місяці тому

      Btw, I have had lots of 300s in my family, one was ran REALLY hot! New radiator, water pump and thermostat, it was like new!
      1985 F150- 300-6, 4-speed manual OD.

    • @drewschumann1
      @drewschumann1 3 місяці тому

      We measure in Freedom Units, not Commie units

    • @gencreeper6476
      @gencreeper6476 3 місяці тому

      I think how its supposed to go is 4.9 is the EFI version and 300 is the carbo version.
      Every old ford ive seen if it said it has a "300" "302" "351" it was always carbureted except for one that was TBI and if it said "4.9" "5.0" "5.8" its the "modernized" engine with full multiport injection

    • @jeffbrown3963
      @jeffbrown3963 2 місяці тому

      We had a 1983 club wagon XLT 4 speed on the floor (3 and overdrive) with a 300 six and it was by far the best vehicle I've ever owned. 200,000 miles with zero engine problems but the rust ate the body up. I still hate myself for letting it go.

  • @golfbravowhiskey8669
    @golfbravowhiskey8669 Рік тому +193

    We run I think at the moment about 15 of those here in the Texas oilfield.
    They run on natural gas from the oilwell casing.
    They run 24 hours a day seven days a week about 350 days a year on average except the days when the well is down
    So if you convert that into a vehicle time, just imagine averaging 45 miles an hour 24 hours a day that would run you about 370,000 miles a year equivalent.
    And those motors run at least two years before something ever happens, and generally it’s just consuming motor oil. Very seldom is a catastrophic event like throwing a rod through the block, or some sort of failure.
    The key to those things are never shut them down. The only time they are turned off generally speaking is for an oil change. We run them with cap and rotor instead of electronic ignition. It’s just less trouble because they sit out in the weather all the time and the least amount of electronics you can have on something the better.
    Never have any problems with the valves or carburetion because they are running on clean natural gas. And with no carbon in the engine, you can run those motors for a month before you change the oil, and believe it or not the old still has color to it due to no carbon.
    Great motors. I pick them up every time I can find them.

    • @epasay9515
      @epasay9515 Рік тому +12

      Interesting comment - great to hear they are still in use. How long do the bearings last in these engines in Texas? 20 years ago I came across the same/similar 300I6 power units in the Lloydminster oil field. At the time they were replacing some of the 300I6 with new units powered by GM 4.3V6, a good engine. I remember the GM units had an auxiliary oiling system that would allow the techs to do halfass oil changes with the engines running. It was 250 hr service intervals. I saw one of the 300's that threw a rod because it was missed on the maintenance schedule and no servicing, they said it was running for 2 months by the time it ran out of oil. I hear they now they use Hyundai 2.4 with NG electronic injection - no idea on the durability though.

    • @golfbravowhiskey8669
      @golfbravowhiskey8669 Рік тому +9

      @@epasay9515 I’ve only seen maybe one or two actually throw a rod.
      Which giving the time that is on those units is pretty understandable.
      I am 52 years old and I have been gauging the same well for 22 years and it has the same motor on it that It did when I started pumping that well.
      It is simply amazing how long that design will run. You can pull that engine up off of the frame with a forklift and do a “ in frame “ with caps and bearings in about 4 hours and be back running.

    • @johndowe7003
      @johndowe7003 Рік тому +1

      The valves get carbed up when the intake sucks dirty air, otherwise it's not too bad

    • @robbycheaib1719
      @robbycheaib1719 Рік тому

      Very interesting!

    • @deejayimm
      @deejayimm Рік тому +1

      @@epasay9515 I don't know anything about oil fields, but I know a lot of the Fork trucks I've driven throughout the years have had the Chevy 4.3, and it's a very durable engine too.

  • @ChuckThree
    @ChuckThree Рік тому +279

    I never expected we’d ever get a Ford 300 tear down. I am so incredibly stoked on this.

    • @TestECull
      @TestECull Рік тому +13

      Yeah me either. Between how insanely durable, rugged, and reliable they are, and how little they actually cost, I figured the only way we'd ever see one on the teardown bench is if a subscriber donated it specifically for a video.

    • @timewa851
      @timewa851 Рік тому +5

      @@TestECull Someone drove into a tree. YipEEEEEEEEEE !
      Big 6 look see.

    • @carrollsanders9376
      @carrollsanders9376 Рік тому +3

      I know where there is one of those engines in an old van.

    • @mattdonna9677
      @mattdonna9677 Рік тому +4

      Power nation did a build on the 300 and it was kick ass.

    • @davelowets
      @davelowets Рік тому

      Why? Do you people think that they NEVER wear out? Or that the trucks around the engines rots out and people keep the engines and just keep replacimg the truck around the engine?
      Of COURSE there's MANY Ford 300 sixes in scrap yards.... Just as many as any other brand.. 🤷🏻

  • @wheeler391970
    @wheeler391970 Рік тому +73

    I'm a hardcore GM guy but I do admit that the Ford 300 six is a heck of an engine!! So simple and bulletproof.

    • @DarkLinkAD
      @DarkLinkAD Рік тому +3

      Yeah, the Big GM Inlines 6s were good competitors but not around in the 90s.

    • @josefrobbins8781
      @josefrobbins8781 5 місяців тому +2

      Chevy 292 is on par IMO

  • @possumpopper89
    @possumpopper89 Рік тому +108

    Most of the big auto makers had a similar engine that was simple and reliable. Ford’s 300, Chevy had their “Stovebolt” 6, Dodge had the slant 6, and AMC had their 4 liter jeep engine. They were all workhorses and super reliable with minimal maintenance.

    • @Acc0919mc
      @Acc0919mc 11 місяців тому +23

      Inline 6 engines are almost always a home run. They sound pretty good too

    • @brahtrumpwonbigly7309
      @brahtrumpwonbigly7309 11 місяців тому +14

      @@Acc0919mc There's ways to mess them up, but the basic design simply lends itself to reliability. Internally balanced, more main bearings, fewer moving parts etc.

    • @marc-oliviercabot3380
      @marc-oliviercabot3380 9 місяців тому +14

      Toyota JZ, Nissan RB... Ford Australia's Barra, BMW straight 6..
      Yep. They're something else..

    • @Mark-in5yw
      @Mark-in5yw 9 місяців тому +8

      None of those engines had 7 main bearing journals and none of those engines were as strong as the 300 Ford.

    • @possumpopper89
      @possumpopper89 9 місяців тому +1

      @@Mark-in5yw ROFL.

  • @johnalees99
    @johnalees99 Рік тому +46

    Finally an engine a blacksmith can work on.

  • @christopherweise438
    @christopherweise438 Рік тому +36

    Eric.....you just brought us Christmas in February.

  • @MMPCTV
    @MMPCTV 11 місяців тому +70

    The Ford 300 straight 6 is an awesome motor. One of the previous Ford CEOs for the truck division wanted to revive it, but there were concerns over emissions. The other concern was that trucks had become a fad and a money maker so they wanted to put an engine in the trucks that was refined and that would appeal to those people who drive "mall queen pickups" (You know. The ones lifted, with lights all over, over sized tires and a bed that has never been dirty).

    • @KStewart-th4sk
      @KStewart-th4sk 8 місяців тому +4

      "mall queen pickups" I like that one. "tonka trucks" where they have the wee little beds where practically nothing can be hauled. Of course, some use a pick-up exactly for what it was intended, but most are just for show and the people driving them are as clean as their flashy, lifted, big chrome wheeled truck. And, of course, it has to be a 4 x 4 even though it hasn't left their city streets in years. If it has, it's never left the highway either. Reminds me how all the city boys dressed like cowboys to line dance with their ladies---what decade was that? Probably driven to the club in their flashy truck. LOL

    • @krisdphillips
      @krisdphillips 7 місяців тому +3

      @@KStewart-th4sk I often refer to these types of trucks as "Pavement Princesses/Princes".
      I wish people bought trucks for what they're made for. My 95 OBS with a 460 is a WELL taken care of truck, but it does work all the time as a hauler moving several thousand pounds.

    • @mitch9521
      @mitch9521 6 місяців тому

      mall queen pickups lmao, just cause you can't afford a nice truck doesn't mean you gotta put others down that can. Crew cab short bed for life. Everything else is just a peasant work truck.

    • @GiordanDiodato
      @GiordanDiodato Місяць тому

      and have it lifted like 30 feet in the air.

  • @THOMMGB
    @THOMMGB Рік тому +14

    I loved this video. I wish you'd rebuild this 300 as a UA-cam series of videos.
    I bought a 1967 Bell Telephone Econoline van back around 1982. The original Bell Telephone color was forest green. When I found it, it had been painted yellow and white and looked terrible. It was used as a work truck and not treated with love and care. The good news is that this van was heavy duty, rust free and came with a 240 CID straight 6 in it. It also had a three on the tree transmission. It was equipped with a heavy duty suspension and nine inch rear end. When found, it was sitting in the owner's back yard on one brake drum and two flat tires. The back doors were open and a big dog was living in the back. The owner said it overheated so he parked it. So after some haggling, I got it for $340.00. The distributor cap had carbon tracking, which was easy enough to fix. After a couple of months of driving, I found that the cylinder head was warped (probably from the earlier overheating) so I took the head off and had a local machine shop make it nice and flat. In early 1985, I drove it from Atlanta, GA to Southern California. I pulled a small moving trailer and my 240 didn't miss a beat. At one time in the early 90's I had a burned exhaust valve so I pulled the head and fixed that. The machine shop guy working on my head told me how wonderful this engine is. I've still got this van. I took a body shop class and learned how to knock out dents. At the time, my van had plenty of dents. Looks a lot better now. I've got all kinds of spare parts and body panels. One day, it'll be a dark green Bell Telephone van once again.

    • @rdallas81
      @rdallas81 10 місяців тому +1

      Awesome
      Thanks for sharing!

  • @stevenlatham4397
    @stevenlatham4397 Рік тому +229

    Even the most hardcore GM guys think it will be a 300 that hauls the last remaining LS to the scrapper.
    We ran one out of oil on the farm and locked it up. The next day after it had cooled overnight, we added oil and it fired right up. Still used it as a feed truck for several more years.

    • @eletricretard3987
      @eletricretard3987 Рік тому +8

      No we don't

    • @michaeltarno2979
      @michaeltarno2979 Рік тому +10

      I can think of only the 3.0L diesel that is used in the 80s toyota hillux as more reliable 🤣

    • @hdezn26
      @hdezn26 Рік тому +22

      @@michaeltarno2979 I'd say the 22R could be a serious contender there... My cousin Had a Hylux and put it thru hell and back... Fequently ran it out/ low on oil and that motor would not die....
      Even after he crashed it and flipped it onto it's top... that damn motor still fired right up....
      The rest of the truck was totaled though....

    • @UAE_8100
      @UAE_8100 Рік тому +17

      Old chevy inline sixes had the same reliability as a 300

    • @stevenlatham4397
      @stevenlatham4397 Рік тому +19

      @@UAE_8100 The 235, 250, and the 292 were excellent engines.

  • @mphilleo
    @mphilleo Рік тому +71

    Warning: long, epic story of truck love below
    My wife and I once owned a '75 Ford F100 Ranger (in green) with the 300 that we used as a second daily driver before we had kids. We even used it to move into our home we currently live in. 3 on the tree, only 54,000 miles, had a couple issues but was mostly a nice, clean, solid truck.
    One memory enshrined it in my memory as a member of the reliability hall of fame. We were driving down the highway between towns, about 15 or 20 miles or so in winter in North Dakota. It was -20° out and it still ran like a champ. We were about 8 miles from home when we noticed it was losing power and heat in the cabin was fading (it has awesome heat). As we saw the temp gauge rise above normal, we pulled over. We waited for it to cool down, but it still wouldn't restart.
    After we tried a couple more times and the cold set in, we called for a ride and got home. The next day we made arrangements for it to be towed home so we could decide what to do with it. I did some forensics and discovered the coolant wasn't the right ratio for winter and had frozen in the block. Noticing that it had some milkshake in the oil and feared for the worst and planned to resuscitate it in the spring. We loved that truck.
    Long story short, I went all in, and swapped the head gasket. It was the first time I did anything like that. After it was done, I flushed the cooling system and put in fresh oil and it ran like a champ until we sold it. It went to a very excited high school boy and his father. We later saw it entered in a local classic car show with a vanity plate, "SWEET P." We like to think she's still out there chugging along.

    • @crankychris2
      @crankychris2 Рік тому +5

      Good chance of it!

    • @microcolonel
      @microcolonel Рік тому +3

      Sweet Pea such a lovely name for a lovely machine.

    • @rdallas81
      @rdallas81 10 місяців тому +1

      I cried reading this.

    • @everettstormy
      @everettstormy 23 дні тому

      Mines been through a flood that destroyed all the other trucks in the neighborhood. It drove out in water up to the bench seat. Then i over heated it and continued to drive it for about 10 miles with no coolant. I've run it out of oil and drove it home multiple times. I dont neglect it but it has sprung a couple terrible leaks and leaked its oil out on the drive.

  • @Zappy1210
    @Zappy1210 2 місяці тому +4

    I bought a 1996 F150 with a 4.9L. I drove it 360k miles, the only engine related issue I ever had was I had to replace an A/C compressor. I sold it to a neighbor in 2018. The engine ran perfect, didn't leak or burn oil, and still had plenty of torque. The truck frame was in pretty rough shape however from 22 years of winter road salt and me not undercoating like I should have. He bought the truck just for the 4.9L. He had a really old Ford tractor he restored and put that 4.9L in it and it's still running strong today.

  • @dancrashclute7003
    @dancrashclute7003 7 місяців тому +4

    I had a 76 f 100. Rebuilt that engine 3 times. The last one was the only time it needed any machine work. Bored it 30 over, shaved the head and deck 10 each.
    Went back with flat top pistons, an RV cam which didnt give much ore lift, but longer duration on the intake side. New valves and springs, ported the head to match an Offenhauser 4bbl dual plane intake from Summit. And a 390 Holley carb. It made 378 hp. And almost 400 ft lb tongue on the engine dyno. Best motor I've ever owned. Sold the truck last year. Still on the road now in houston, sporting a new paint job. Really wish I had her back

  • @bazzathegreat3517
    @bazzathegreat3517 Рік тому +51

    A 300 with a granny gear 4 speed was a towing machine. I was sad when they stopped making the engine. This engine is the definition of they don't make them like they used to.

    • @mikedesensi6391
      @mikedesensi6391 Рік тому +4

      ford put them out (in 1977) with a single core radiator, work for communting but was under functional when doing heavy towing
      and made that truck prown to overheating, a 3 or 4 core (cant remember wich, just to many years ago) radiator change out solved that hickup

    • @johndowe7003
      @johndowe7003 Рік тому +2

      I use a 300f150 with the Mazda 5sp transmission it pulls pretty good (small tires to apply more torque)

    • @johndowe7003
      @johndowe7003 Рік тому +1

      @@mikedesensi6391 hmm you might be onto something with that. I had overheating problems with a fully loaded truck (weighed down to where the axles are bottomed out) got a single core rad. Only problem I ever had with the truck otherwise

    • @kingjesus7926
      @kingjesus7926 11 місяців тому +1

      I have this motor and a Toyota 4.7 . Toyota is better motor that will last even longer. I like the 4.9 for sure but to me the 4.7 toyota is the best motor ever built. You do have to do the timing.

    • @jdrok5026
      @jdrok5026 11 місяців тому

      ​@@kingjesus7926neither of them are good.

  • @TestECull
    @TestECull Рік тому +195

    16:29 and that's why you NEVER have valve timing problems with these engines. What I love to see! That timing set is immortal. They're said to live through two engine rebuilds before they even get any appreciable wear on them and I don't think anyone's ever put so many miles on one of these engines that they truly wore a timing set out.
    Uhh, word of advice, don't try to get the gear off the cam. IT's a press fit. They're married for life. Death do them part type deal.

    • @riccocool
      @riccocool Рік тому +12

      Like my previous 2 wives. Similar.

    • @OvertravelX
      @OvertravelX Рік тому +12

      The old IH 304 in my Scout had a gear driven cam as well. It weighed 700lbs and I think it was rated at 145 gross hp.

    • @jeffpolakiewicz2277
      @jeffpolakiewicz2277 Рік тому +8

      Had one the crank keyway enlarged caused a knock and led to timing gear tooth breakage. Why it enlarged don't know.

    • @Prestiged_peck
      @Prestiged_peck Рік тому +1

      @@jeffpolakiewicz2277 that was probably some impressive levels of abuse!

    • @jeffpolakiewicz2277
      @jeffpolakiewicz2277 Рік тому +1

      @@Prestiged_peck Box truck

  • @JeromeDiamond-cs7yw
    @JeromeDiamond-cs7yw Рік тому +107

    Great video, brings back memories. I'm a retired Ford tool eng who worked for 20 yrs at cep#1 the home of the 300. Some trivia for you, the 300 was based on a Mercedes straight six. Ford truck mandated tighter tolerances on these engines which also contributed to their longevity. We had a group of GM hourly come in from their Oldsmobile plant. We gave them the run of the place, made friends for life, they all had 300's

    • @briansearles4473
      @briansearles4473 Рік тому +3

      I'm not 100% certain, but wasn't the 300 designed by the same engineer who did the famous Hudson 308 c.u. twin H, flathead six?

    • @rvarsigfusson6163
      @rvarsigfusson6163 Рік тому

      @@briansearles4473 Would like to know more.....

    • @jimgrazulis3542
      @jimgrazulis3542 Рік тому

      @@briansearles4473 The Hudson 308 was just a stroked and bored 262 which began in '48.

    • @jimgrazulis3542
      @jimgrazulis3542 Рік тому +2

      The 300 is based on the 240 which bagean in '65.

    • @adreucatraucali
      @adreucatraucali Рік тому +2

      The split exhaust manifolds looked like the old Mercedes.

  • @timlee4204
    @timlee4204 4 місяці тому +8

    Iron water pump!!! Designed to last forever, just fit a kit when it goes bad. (From my book, My Teen Years.) A Fordson Tractor Waterpump. I was 18, 1963 and I fortunately found employment in the Queensland, Australia, Main Roads Department. It was possibly a year or two later when the below incident occurred.
    The bitumen gang had a tractor dragging a broom. The boss and I went out to repair the waterpump, it was usual in those days to press the pump apart and replace the worn kit, bearing and seal not like today where you dump the old one in the bin, pull a new one out of a box. We were on the side of the road with the pump setup on some ripper tines and a hydraulic jack under the tractors front axle! Ted from down under.

    • @mpetersen6
      @mpetersen6 Місяць тому

      What really caused a lot of water pump failures comes down to two things. One is the mechanical seal failing between the impeller and the bearings. Second is the belts start to slip and idiots overtighten the belts putting a heavy side load on the bearings. The material in the housing itself gas little to do with it. I've seen guys build minature drill presses using water pump bearing assemblies (1) as the spindle. Turn or grind a taper on one end to mount the chuck.
      1) The shaft and bearing assembly came in from the manufacturer as a unit. Sealed bearings. The weep hole in the pump should keep coolant away from the bearings but shit happens.

  • @gridlore
    @gridlore Рік тому +21

    I can't explain why, but the sound of breaking a bolt has just become so comforting to me.

  • @reign114
    @reign114 Рік тому +46

    Back in the day, I bought a 1979 F-100 with a 300 in it. Former owner put cold water in it when it overheated. The head cracked between each valve on each cylinder. First engine I ever rebuilt using an old Chilton manual as a guide.

  • @daledavidson7266
    @daledavidson7266 Рік тому +57

    Eric, love this video. I've got a 89 f150 with the 300 that my dad bought new. It has 240k miles and still kicking strong. Had to replace radiator, alternator, valve cover gasket and even transmission but the engine is still going. I change the oil every 4k miles. Your not going to win races with it but I love the old girl. Thanks again for the content. Old Hickory, Tn. 🇺🇸

    • @rolandthethompsongunner64
      @rolandthethompsongunner64 8 місяців тому +1

      Trucks are work horses in my opinion. If you want to race to work buy a car. 😂

    • @hickstylez
      @hickstylez 7 місяців тому +1

      If it has the 4 speed manual it's likely THE slowest vehicle on the road my 88 f250 is slow lol but I can shift err pretty quick if I want to lol still slow

    • @daledavidson7266
      @daledavidson7266 7 місяців тому +1

      @hickstylez Hey bud, the old girl has
      a 5 speed manual. But starts every time.

  • @jefferykaighin7039
    @jefferykaighin7039 11 місяців тому +24

    I totally agree. Yes I'm a diehard GM LS fan but in my 40+ years of Automotive experience, the 300 6 cylinder / 4.9 EFI engine is hands down the best, most reliable engine ever. I personally drove a 77 F-250, (which was one of our farm trucks) to high school and when we sold it, the speedo had been broken at 410k for over 5 years. Then dad bought an 88 4.9 efi 4x4 that was a mail truck and we took it over 500k miles. I've been in Automotive Management for 32 years in the shipping business (Brown Truck's) and we beat the snot out of these and rarely did we loose one under 300k. I personally rebuild my neighbors f-150 and when I tore it down, I could still see the cross hatch in the cylinder walls at 102k, it didn't need rebuild! Like they say..After Armageddon is over, the only thing that will survive is Cocroaches and 300 6 cylinders!

  • @CathyInBlue
    @CathyInBlue Рік тому +92

    I'd love to see you take those parts as a starting point and completely rehab and rebuild this engine. Doubtless it would not make financial sense, but I think it would make good UA-cam TV.

    • @bendeleted9155
      @bendeleted9155 Рік тому +16

      POWERNATION channel did a Ford 300 build series about a year ago that is worth watching. They took it from a former stationary power plant application and built it in stages, dyno-ing it along the way.

    • @steveb6103
      @steveb6103 Рік тому +8

      With sending the block , head ,and crank. Out for machining $1200. To do complete rebuild.

    • @TestECull
      @TestECull Рік тому +4

      @@steveb6103 Which is a hell of a lot cheaper than a modern engine. and you'll get some free cubes along the way!

    • @brianlamb7937
      @brianlamb7937 Рік тому

      @@bendeleted9155 That was a good 1 and they got some really impressive numbers out of it.

    • @robertwest3093
      @robertwest3093 Рік тому

      POWERNATION just about doubled the power output by just installing a 4 barrel intake and long tube header. The factory 1 barrel carburetor and small port intake manifold are terribly restrictive.

  • @brandonyarbrough4260
    @brandonyarbrough4260 Рік тому +58

    The crazy thing is that you could probably put it all back together as you found it, drop it in a truck and drive it home! Lol. Those engins are insanely tough!

  • @martymorse2
    @martymorse2 Рік тому +32

    We had a slant six by Mopar and the Ford Straight six in trucks on our family farm. Both always started and required little maintenance other than filters and occasional oil changes. Incredible engines that have stood the test of time.

    • @markleggett3944
      @markleggett3944 6 місяців тому +1

      Look how much progress we've made since then. High strung, high maintenance units that might last 150K.

    • @X85283
      @X85283 4 місяці тому +1

      @@markleggett3944 on the other hand the 300 made like 150hp max even with EFI, and probably would be rated at less with modern HP ratings. All while getting like 20MPG or whatever at best. I love mine (I have a 240 in my 68 F100)... but if Ford tried to release a 150hp gigantic iron beast that only got 20mpg today.... They would be mocked mercilessly and nobody would buy it.

  • @robertbritton9674
    @robertbritton9674 11 місяців тому +14

    By far the best engine ever made by any manufacturer. I had one in a 94 F150 with 300k miles and was still running like a sewing machine when I sold it and the new owner is in love with the truck.

    • @mpetersen6
      @mpetersen6 Місяць тому

      The best by any manufacturer? That's debatable. Another good candidate would be the Volvo Red Block 4 cylinder. The Ford Barra used in taxis would rack up some truely incredible numbers of miles or kms. One thing that's really needed for an engine to have a long lasting potential life is a good oiling system.

  • @TestECull
    @TestECull Рік тому +61

    8:54 Those shorties are sought after. They flow damn near as well as an aftermarket header does and are a common upgrade for the older carburetted engines which just have a pair of cast iron 'logs', one for intake one for exhaust. Worth a decent amount of money on their own.

  • @jaredkennedy6576
    @jaredkennedy6576 Рік тому +82

    There are a few issues on those later engines. The cam gear for a while was fiber, and would disintegrate, but it's a non interference engine so a new gear fixes it. The heads can crack between the valves, but that usually takes some major overheating. The plastic was likely dropped in when the pan gasket was changed, it looks like a hose support. The heads don't flow very well, but there is tons of meat for porting, and unshrouding the intake valve makes a huge difference too.
    The 300 and 240 came out in 65, and both were available in the trucks until 74, then only the 300 from there out. The 240 was also available in full size cars as the base engine, but was dropped in 74.
    I've built these engines a few different ways, with my favorite build having been a late 70s head and block, bored .080" over, using flat top pistons from a 360 to get ~9.5:1 compression. I kept the stock 1bbl carb, and it moved my old van very nicely.

    • @stefanl5183
      @stefanl5183 Рік тому +15

      "The cam gear for a while was fiber"
      Yeah, my understanding is they originally used metal gears but at some point a decision was made to switch to nylon due to noise reduction. Most people recommend changing to the metal gear, because the nylon ones have been known to fail.

    • @midnitetoker15
      @midnitetoker15 Рік тому +11

      I was going to say something about reliability of these , I've seen one towed into my old shop as a no start- Phenolic cam gear teeth had stripped out, first time I'd ever seen a fiber/plastic cam gear

    • @HowardJrFord
      @HowardJrFord Рік тому +7

      @@midnitetoker15 chevy 6 cylinders , as well as all of their V8 engines always used nylon timing gears . Nearly all domestic V8 engines started using nylon timing gears in the mid 60's and continued to do so for decades .

    • @charlesangell_bulmtl
      @charlesangell_bulmtl Рік тому +3

      @@HowardJrFord Grew up in a GM family, learned to hate what the bean counters did to the faithful customer.
      Granddad had farm trucks that had the 'for dependable economical transportation' tags on the kick plate
      But one of the WORST screwing was the Olds/Pontiac stories...

    • @FRLN500
      @FRLN500 Рік тому +7

      The 300 I6 has a 4" bore. The 360 V8 has a 4.05 bore. Overboring the 300 by .080 would not allow you to run the 360 pistons. Most hot rodders overbore the 300 by .050 and run the 360 or 390 flat tops. An Offenhauser dual port intake with a Holley 390 cfm 4 barrel carb, comp cams high energy camshaft, porting and polishing of the head and a set of steel tube 3 into one headers make the 300 into a real powerhouse.

  • @IacobucciB
    @IacobucciB Рік тому +6

    I love these things. Heavy, slow, rock simple and require about as much maintenance as an anvil. They were extremely overbuilt (and never made enough power to hurt themselves), which greatly helped their longevity. I remember growing up with my dad, he had a 1993 F150 with this mill, and gave it to a friend after buying his 99 F250 used (I was about 5 at the time, maybe around 2002-2003). His friend still drives it, and it is well north of 500K miles. The entire truck has fallen apart around it. Shackles and spring perches are paper thin, the bed has rotted out long ago, and the bottom of the cab has mostly returned to the earths, but it still runs beautifully, and he states that it barely burns oil (although it leaks plenty). It now resides in a stone quarry now, living an easy life of pulling a water tank around the pit once a week, probably never to see the road again. I’m trying to get the engine and trans out of it, once it inevitably splits in half for a half-assed rebuild and some boost, to put in a Jeep.

  • @diamondflaw
    @diamondflaw Рік тому +4

    My dad has a 66 F250 with one of these that started life as a logging company truck. It continues to haul firewood to this day.

  • @johnlancy4220
    @johnlancy4220 Рік тому +66

    My first car was a 81 f150 with this engine. One of the great things was that it didn’t take up a ton of the room in the engine bay so it was much easier to get to things than modern engines.

    • @johndowe7003
      @johndowe7003 Рік тому +1

      I got a 87f150 good trucks for sure. Wish it was a 250

    • @scottpearce7466
      @scottpearce7466 Рік тому

      Had a 77 F150 extended cab with 8ft bed, & that big 6 got 21mpg on the road way back then. + it was easy to work on!

  • @CJColvin
    @CJColvin Рік тому +20

    Gotta love the 300 inline Six brother, it'll outlast any Ecoboost engine with ease.

    • @BobSmith-mc7uq
      @BobSmith-mc7uq Рік тому +4

      300: Hey ecoboost, where are you going to leak today?
      Ecoboost: Anywhere I want, wiseass!

    • @randymagnum143
      @randymagnum143 Рік тому +4

      @@BobSmith-mc7uq eco boost: jumps time.

    • @BobSmith-mc7uq
      @BobSmith-mc7uq Рік тому

      @@LMHS63John Bingo. The wife had a lease Escape, think it was an 18 or 19. Low miles, started gurgling the coolant, dealer dropped in a new short block.
      Towards the end of the lease, the dealer she leased it from hounded her to bring it back in so they could resell it.
      She went to a different dealer, they had her buy out the lease, bought it from her & she walked away with money in her pocket.
      While she was waiting on the engine work, she had another Escape she was driving, Titanium. Nice car.

  • @christophermitchum6829
    @christophermitchum6829 11 місяців тому +2

    Had a 350...302...360...283... still. THAT 300 ate the dirt and RAN...in my 3/4 ton Ford E250!!! Had beefed up rear end, shocks, etc... OUCH!!! Used to haul AT LEAST a ton inside ...man, Ford NAILED it!!!!! ✔️🤟✌️

  • @mikecastillo8747
    @mikecastillo8747 10 місяців тому +1

    Great breakdown video! Love how you efficiently remove all the accessories and systematically disassemble each section. Looking forward to your next teardown.

  • @lucidingo3455
    @lucidingo3455 Рік тому +33

    You made my day.
    I've got one of these in the driveway in a 1991 F150 attached to the Mazda 5 speed that Ford used at the time.
    This motor put out about 1 Hp for every 2 cubic inches.
    I can go slow for the rest of my life with this motor.
    Thanks, Great video!

    • @crankychris2
      @crankychris2 Рік тому +5

      Only 145 hp FI but 280 ft lbs of torque. 7 main bearings gives it a continuous duty rating, they make 92 KW running on nat gas.

  • @remingtonwingmaster6929
    @remingtonwingmaster6929 Рік тому +77

    I've been hoping you'd do one of these. Loved it! The 4.9L in my 92 F150 (bought new) ran perfect at 240,000 when I got rid of it. One of the most reliable, low maintenance, never in the shop engines I've owned.

    • @aaronturner1072
      @aaronturner1072 Рік тому +7

      My dad had one in his E150. Cargo van. In white. Same year though
      255k on it before it even hiccupped thinking something went on the distributor because it would start but wouldn't idle right. Still could move the van just slowly and had no issue holding 60 mph with a dead miss.
      These things are true workhorses!

    • @garion60
      @garion60 Рік тому +1

      I had an '87 Bronco out in Nebraska (salt roads in Winter) and the body just rotted away...motor and 5-speed (LUK clutch) ran like scalded dogs. I REALLY miss that truck (4X4).

    • @CJColvin
      @CJColvin Рік тому +3

      The 300 Inline Six is basically Ford's version of the Toyota 2RE (considering they both have outstanding reliability and dependability as well that live for decades and decades) and they'll outlast any EcoBoost engine Ford makes with ease.

    • @mauserdave
      @mauserdave Рік тому +1

      Bet you it's still out there driving somewhere

    • @josephhayes8581
      @josephhayes8581 Рік тому +2

      Same story here , 92 , 4.9 , 240 tho. most reliable . Mine had a 5 speed manual.

  • @frasercrone3838
    @frasercrone3838 8 місяців тому +2

    In Australia we used the small cousins of these engines up till the mid seventies and then started playing around with the heads to make them crossflow and then we switched the cam to up top and then we added another cam and the Barra engine was born. Yes there were bottom end changes but when you start with a strong set up and improve it you get something even stronger. Inline sixes are great. lets put a twin cam Barra head on a 300 bottom end and watch it boogie, if only we could. The sludge in the sump is plain old dirt. When it falls out of suspension it forms a rubbery mat. You would see this a lot in the Flintstones era when the crankcase ventilation was a pipe straight out of the side of the crankcase and pointed at the ground. You might have a bit of steel mesh in the pipe to keep rocks out. You would also see that same gunk in oil bath air cleaners. They were from before the Flintstones era.

  • @g3n3sis50
    @g3n3sis50 9 місяців тому

    This is one of the few videos that I could watch without skipping, love the Ford 300 and 240! great video!

  • @moman0166
    @moman0166 Рік тому +12

    I was a mechanic for Ford starting in 1971. This engine was bulletproof and this engine was very rebuildable after a trip to machine shop. It was plugs and points back then.

  • @FusionBoost2.0
    @FusionBoost2.0 Рік тому +19

    My uncle has one in his old 81 f150 he uses in the summer. It's been redone and keeps it as a summer cruiser. 3 speed on the tree, 2wd, 300 with the old carb. Simple machine and runs like a top

  • @bishopcorva
    @bishopcorva 8 місяців тому +1

    I was friends with a guy that had a dad that hotrodded the ford 300. To the point it sounded like a cammed up 429 and ran like a nicely warmed over 351c. He loved the mid seventies to mid eighties blocks for the work over. All the smog equipment get pulled off, valves, head flow, a bit extra stroke and larger bore had it pushing 5.3-5.5 liter six. Fab up a four barrel intake a triple two exhaust (three sets of two into one pipes then into two with cross duals).
    It was wacky feeling those straining against the brakes as you loaded up for launch. Just smooth, no real trembling like an bb eight. Just dump it and pedal to the floor hold on to your butt. I don't know how many of those were around for five counties. Chances are someone has one in a rusty pickup in a back yard or a few made their way to a scrap yard. Anyone that found one and knew it was different would be wise to put it back into service on a ratrod or just rebuild and paint for a garage art piece of hotrod history.

  • @mikeb.3918
    @mikeb.3918 Рік тому

    Had one in my '91 full size Bronco, coupled to a 5 speed manual. LOVED that engine. Narrow power band, huge torque.

  • @TestECull
    @TestECull Рік тому +40

    28:03 Still probably ran just fine truth be told, at least as far as bottom end racket goes. And keep in mind these things don't really give a shit what viscosity oil you put in them, so when the bottom ends start getting noisy they'll just get fed thicker and thicker oils until each change is 7 quarts of 75w90.

    • @robertmcgovern8850
      @robertmcgovern8850 Рік тому +1

      And you know it is time to up the viscosity when you air cleaner housing fills up with engine oil. These engines may be unkillable, but you'll wish they would just die already. I owned 5wo F150s with the 300 I6. Put a reman in one at 125k; the other started blowing oil at 150k.

    • @TestECull
      @TestECull Рік тому

      @@robertmcgovern8850 lol you think that's time for a replacement on a 300? A third of the way into its useful lifespan and you yeet it because the air filter is slightly oily?! God I feel sorry for your wallet with this modern garbage that doesn't even last that long before it spins a rod bearing...
      350k miles on mine before I finally called it. I prolly drove that son of a bitch for 10 years with it oiling its air filter like you describe. It still ran fine, it still had oil pressure, so I still drove it. I only called it when the bottom end started clattering to beat the band and the oil pressure gauge didn't move.

    • @TestECull
      @TestECull Рік тому

      @@robertmcgovern8850 By the by, the time to up the oil viscosity is when you get bottom end clatter, not when you get a little blowby. Blowby is top end wear and you're never gonna get that to go away by putting thicker oil in the sump.
      Also you're never gonna get a 300 that doesn't have a healthy amount of blowby. They weren't built with that in mind. They have a lot of blowby even when brand new, just how they are. all the tolerances on these things come from the mid 1960s when people just didn't worry too much about making engines fit super super super closely like they do today. They put more value on rugged durability than they did close precision part fitment, so yeah, these things have blowby by default. Every engine from that era does. Just the nature of the beast.

    • @robertmcgovern8850
      @robertmcgovern8850 Рік тому

      @@TestECull Agree with all of that. But it did seem to get unsupportable around 90-150k miles. Like, when my father gifted me the first F-150 (c. 1982 model), he had wired an orange juice bottle to the grille and ran a hose from the air filter's PCV fitting to catch the engine oil.😄 Had to empty it every 1000 miles or so. And keep a case of 50wt behind the seat. There's little doubt the 300 would have run another 100k like that, if you kept filling & emptying the oil.
      I dropped a reman in the first truck ($1400, plus a clutch pack), which was dead simple even for a relative newbie like me.🙂 When the second gifted F-150 (c.1988 model) started blowing oil, I just traded it in. Both trucks wound up costing me $250 a month to keep them on the road (water pump, starter, ball joints, radiator, starter, manifold, distributor, did I mention starter?). The two Toyota trucks I've owned since have a combined 550k on them and burn/blow zero oil. I feel no nostalgia for the F-150s at all.😒

    • @TestECull
      @TestECull Рік тому

      @@robertmcgovern8850 lol I'm gonna have to call bullshit on that level of oil use. Either he was way overfilling it or he somehow managed to burn a hole in a piston. Mine...keep in mind this is with 350,000 miles of wear and prolly a good 40-50 thousandths ring ridge built up...didn't foul up an air filter all that quick. I never had to top the oil up and the air filter lasted about 30-35k miles.
      Either you're just full of shit or there was something really wierd going on with your engines that doesn't happen in anyone else's.

  • @Lammergeier350
    @Lammergeier350 Рік тому +60

    Yes! Another classic off the list!
    Thank you for your effort in finding this motor. I've turned wrenches on these guys for ages but have never been able to tear one apart - none of them ever failed on me enough to tear down.
    It's tough to screw up a straight six. The Chrysler Slant, the AMC 242, even the GM TurboThrift are all pretty reliable and make excellent torque for their displacements, but the 300 is just an absolute monster in terms of sheer durability in the face of neglect. I appreciate the salvage efforts!

    • @johnstreet797
      @johnstreet797 Рік тому +7

      Keep it below 4 grand and it will run forever.

    • @TestECull
      @TestECull Рік тому +6

      @@johnstreet797 Nah even at 4 grand it will run forever as long as there's something vaguely oil like in the pan. 10w, 20w, 30, 40, 50, any multivis between 10w30 and 75w90, hell you could probably dump seven quarts of castor oil in the sump and never have any problems as long as it doesnt sit long enough to gum up.

    • @chaddog313
      @chaddog313 Рік тому +2

      Don't forget the jeep 4.0L. Another near bullet proof motor.

    • @TestECull
      @TestECull Рік тому +1

      @@chaddog313 Somewhat, if you got a carburetted one. If you get an EFI model you get that oh-so-wonderful Chrysler electrical unreliability bolted onto the outside. Still a really good longblock with a bunch of shit smeared over the side haha

    • @chaddog313
      @chaddog313 Рік тому

      @@TestECull yea I had a bunch of 80's cj's I used to build for 4 wheeling. The efi from the 90s yj sucked the latter tjs with no distributors were pretty bad ass though. They didn't mind getting wet at all

  • @paulshlasko3608
    @paulshlasko3608 Рік тому +1

    In 1976 I bought an old 1966 Econoline van with a 240 in it. The engine was blown and I paid $75. for the whole van. I did an amateur rebuild with the engine in the truck. I was able to drop the oil pan, remove the head, take out the pistons, etc, using all hand tools of course. The cylinder head went to the shop. I remember that the cylinder bores were really worn as evidenced by the ridges. Two pistons had holes in them. I put new pistons, rings, and bearings in, all original size. Really an amateur job by a 20 something amateur. It ran, always using a small amount of oil. Well, I drove that thing for 60k more miles and then sold it in working order. When I saw this video, I was smiling the whole time, and I can appreciate how crazy and broke and young I was. You're not kidding, that engine was really great!

  • @deancoleman8969
    @deancoleman8969 Рік тому

    My first highschool shop build. Old tech but bullet proof. Thank-you for the memories.

  • @chad8329
    @chad8329 Рік тому +16

    I'm surprised you didn't pull the lifter side cover since that's not a frequent thing people see. But I'm glad you retrieved this engine from the bin!! Thanks!!

  • @workwillfreeyou
    @workwillfreeyou Рік тому +6

    I bought a Ford F150 new in 1988 with this 300 six cylinder engine. 18 years later it still ran like new. The only thing that I did was replace 1 freeze plug. Not even a water pump or alternator.

    • @johnfranklin5277
      @johnfranklin5277 Рік тому

      If you only drove it 1000 miles a year, thats not impressive. Tell us the mileage it had on it. Thats what we want to know!!

    • @ndog1234765
      @ndog1234765 Рік тому

      @John Franklin I have a 95 with almost 500,000 km (close to 300,000 miles). I am the fourth owner (that I know of). The gentleman that owned it before me ran it out of coolant twice and never changed the oil.
      It was running just fine (a little lower on power than it should be) until I freshened it up and slapped two turbos onto it. I'm almost at the point of having it on the road again.

  • @joshwhite1009
    @joshwhite1009 10 місяців тому +2

    My first vehicle was a red '93 F-150 with a 300 in it. Short bed, 2-wheel drive, with a 5-speed. I enjoyed that truck so much. I have never seen the insides of one of these, because I never had to do anything to mine. I really appreciate seeing this. One of my favorites (so far) of your vids!

  • @nathanhale7444
    @nathanhale7444 Рік тому +4

    I'm a Chevy guy but I have a great deal of respect for the 4.9L. Not only are they super reliable but with the fuel injection and intake they are super fuel efficient and have about the same power as a 302. I'm actually rebuilding one right now with a rv cam and Bosch performance flow matched injectors.

    • @buddyrojek9417
      @buddyrojek9417 Рік тому

      Hi, I am in Australia, I would like to replace my 351 cleveland with this type of engine, as fuel economy is atrocious in my f250 with Holley carb and propane. what mileage do you get or expect?

    • @nathanhale7444
      @nathanhale7444 Рік тому +1

      @@buddyrojek9417 mine is still a work in progress. A friend with 95 f150 5 speed 2 wheel drive got around 22 maybe 24 highway. I got flow matched bosch4 injectors and a mild cam (more for efficiency than power) so along with the efi system I'm expecting good results once I get it all put together.

    • @buddyrojek9417
      @buddyrojek9417 Рік тому

      @@nathanhale7444 thanks for that, mine does 3 km to litre of propane at 65mph

    • @buddyrojek9417
      @buddyrojek9417 Рік тому

      @@nathanhale7444 your friends truck gets 3 times the mileage of a mild stock 351 v8 on propane, I am impressed by the ford 6

    • @nathanhale7444
      @nathanhale7444 Рік тому +1

      @@buddyrojek9417 well propane is kinda Hard to compare to gasoline. It's energy density is lower but you do get a little more power and it burns so clean you hardly ever have to change the oil. The straight 6 design is by nature more efficient than a v8 because of its harmonics but the fuel injection, 5 speed transmission combined with how well they're balanced seems to be what sets it apart so much. Oh I almost forgot it had had royal purple oil in it since it was almost new and even with over 200k miles didn't leak a drop of oil between changes. Synthetic oil also makes an engine more efficient.

  • @gapratt4955
    @gapratt4955 Рік тому +27

    For a deeper dive into the 300 six look up what Power Nation did with one. Starting with one from a industrial pump and making 81 horse power they went crazy and had the thing making around 500 horse on the dyno. Be surprised if someone does not snap up this one for a buildable core.

    • @bobkonradi1027
      @bobkonradi1027 Рік тому

      There was a man from Virginia or North Carolina who took 3 Ford Boss 302 cast iron cross flow cylinder heads with big valves and ports, (no such thing as aluminum heads at the time), welded them together (note: 300-sixes have 4.48 bore centers, but 302's have 4.38 bore centers) machined off the exhausts, raised the exhausts by 1/2 or 3/4" with aluminum plates, had a special cam made up, (the intake exhaust valve sequence is exactly opposite between a 300-6 and a small block Ford V-8) adapted Chrysler 392 mechanical fuel injectors, and ran the engine for years at the drags, setting the elapsed time and mph records for his class several times. The video is on UA-cam, search under.. "Six In A Row Sherman Slighs Boss 310 Six Cylinder Ford..." His interview starts at 27:20 in to the video. . Going back to the 1960s-70s, I had a friend who ran a 300-6 at a local 3/16 mile dirt track, 305 cubic inch size limit, homemade 4-bbl intake, several other mods for "durability and economy" and he was rarely beaten. His 300 6cyl had torque coming off the curves that Chevy and Ford 302 V8s could only dream about, and he still was able to go down the straits as fast as anybody else. But the key was he had the torque coming off the curves. And BTW, the 2nd fastest car at the track had a Chevy 292 straight 6. The inline 6s just had the torque down low that (as above) Chevy and Ford 302s couldn't even dream about.

    • @vincentrobinette1507
      @vincentrobinette1507 Рік тому +1

      If the cylinder head isn't cracked, it's a KEEPER!

  • @randr10
    @randr10 Рік тому +24

    I agree on serviceability too. You can tell that whoever engineered it did it with that in mind. It's kind of funny because you never have to tear them down, so it doesn't matter that they're so easy to work on. I put a new distributor in one many years ago and forgot to put the oil pump driveshaft back in when I reinstalled it. After starting and shutting it down due to the loud lifter noise for 20 minutes of total running, I finally realized what I had done. Sick to my stomach, I located the driveshaft for the oil pump and fired it up once again. The valve train noise persisted, so I pulled it half out of the shop to let it blow up right there in the driveway as I cleaned up the shop. After about 25 minutes of further idling, I went to go shut it off because I had to get to bed, and right before I did, the lifter noise stopped and never came back. I drove that truck another 15k miles with that engine with no further issues. It did lose oil pressure at idle but no knock developed and it didn't even take a hit on gas mileage. Only reason I tore that engine out and rebuilt it is because I needed to do a cross-country run from California to NYS to pick up some belongings I had left and my brother and sister's house when I left. I think the engine probably would have made the trip fine, but with the oiling issue I didn't feel comfortable, so I took it to the machine shop, had the cylinders bored .030 over, had the crank polished, did pistons, rings, cam and threw it back together.
    The reason this story is so remarkable to me is that I once had a perfectly running Chevy 350 in a van that lost oil pressure for maybe 10 seconds at idle because the oil filter had rusted completely through, and when I pulled it out of the weeds to bring it into the shop, it dropped the entire contents of the oil pan on the ground. It lost oil pressure pulling it into the shop and shut itself off due to the low oil pressure sensor as I went to throw it into park. That few seconds of no oil pressure? The engine was dunzo. We tried doing an oil and filter change, but the bearings were already gone. My buddy whose truck it was drove it for another couple weeks like that but couldn't keep oil in it. We tore it down and it was completely destroyed. None of the bearings spun but they were badly damaged, and the cylinder walls were badly scored. I have a lot of reverence for the SBC even though I'm a Ford guy, but that just illustrates the difference between a V8 and an I6 and the differences in reliability. The crankshaft on the I6 with 7 main bearings is just so much more stable with much less deflection and therefore less friction. that's the only way I can explain the lack of damage to the bearings with me running that thing so long with no oil pressure. I still have a hard time believing it even though it was mee that had the experience. 20 minutes with no oil, and the engine was like, meh.

    • @selfdo
      @selfdo Рік тому +1

      The "little brother" to the 300 Six was a 240 CID offering; same bore, shorter stroke. Along with the 300, came out in ' 62 or '65, can't remember which, and was intended for the FULL-SIZE Fords as the base engine. Any engine has to have a fairly stout bottom end to be hauling around a Ford Galaxie sedan. Few private customers bought 'em, I understand most went into non-police fleets. I do recall seeing one in a neighbors' 1970 Ford.

    • @randr10
      @randr10 Рік тому +1

      @@selfdo Yup. I've heard of the 240. I watched a video recently where they found one in an early '70s Ford 1/2 ton van but I've never seen one in person. I think from the outside they're basically identical to the 300.

    • @josephmclennan1229
      @josephmclennan1229 11 місяців тому

      @@selfdo I have a 70 with a 240 .

    • @jdrok5026
      @jdrok5026 11 місяців тому

      The 300 needs maintenance the gaskets are terrible on these older i6s. And they do tend to need repairs on the in two and outer two cylinders. The efi 300 this is less of a problem. But the 300 i6 isn't that great on reliability. If you guys didn't use running as the objective measure you'd see most older i6s are outside of desired optimal health

    • @jdrok5026
      @jdrok5026 11 місяців тому

      V8 5 main designs have less crank deflection and are more stable than a i6 7 main bearing design.. this is objective truth.

  • @hunterspioch5340
    @hunterspioch5340 Рік тому +1

    I'm not even a mechanic I just enjoy seeing how things work and what makes them tick.

  • @chrisziemba3889
    @chrisziemba3889 Рік тому +3

    i have had 4 300 straight six. loved every one. the best one in a 68 econoline. that van went for years and years and years. all over the southeast usa. what a nice ride.

  • @bryandouglas739
    @bryandouglas739 Рік тому +12

    My 94 is still running great at 360,000 miles and I also have a 93 with 420,000 miles she’s the drinker of oil but as long as she has oil she runs well for the amount of abuse it’s been through lol best engine ever made I think!

    • @darrellhobbs1898
      @darrellhobbs1898 Рік тому

      Hey I was just wondering what type of oil and weight u run in the 300s. I have a 94 f150 with the 300 and currently using Rotella but seen yours have that many miles I'm wanting to shoot for that many on mine. Thanks

    • @bryandouglas739
      @bryandouglas739 Рік тому +1

      @@darrellhobbs1898 I got the 93 with a little more than 200,000 on it and drove it for over 10 years and it did really well with the Motor Craft 5w-20 or 5w-30. I’ve not once had a lifter our valve knock on a cold start like I’ve had when using other brands, at least in that price range so when I got the 94 I started using the same thing and the same results. I never really thought about running shell, I would assume using it would give you the same results if not better! And especially if you are keeping up with maintenance on a regular basis.

    • @darrellhobbs1898
      @darrellhobbs1898 Рік тому

      Thank you for your time writing back. I really appreciate it.

  • @jdfmfb03
    @jdfmfb03 Рік тому +18

    Eric thanks for this 300 teardown
    What this showed was the design of why this engine was bullet proof. Ford’s champion

  • @epasay9515
    @epasay9515 Рік тому

    Great video. I always wondered what the 300 looked like inside as I never had the opportunity to get into one myself. The first new truck we bought on the farm was a 1986 F250 with the 300I6, last summer it rolled over 888,000 km on original engine; its hurting but still runs, drives and is put to work every day. Its on its 4th carter YF carb, 3rd transmission, 2nd rear end, 3rd bench seat, etc. The only original parts on the truck are the frame, twin I beam's, cab, doors, and of course, the engine. Well, 3 hubcaps are original too. I didn't care much for this work truck when I was younger but now I cannot part with it. Thanks for posting this.

  • @user-wp7ib6ew9r
    @user-wp7ib6ew9r Місяць тому

    Finally a real video on these engines
    I remember looking up ford300s on here about a year or 2 ago and there was only boosted f150 videos

  • @CaptainRon1913
    @CaptainRon1913 Рік тому +16

    I had a 300 six in a 1976 Ford Econoline. Aside from a few alternators, starter, and a valve job, I drove that van 400k miles. For 20k miles before I sold it, it had deep engine knock, but it still ran pretty darn good... That engine actually looks quite rebuildable

  • @Dis-Emboweled
    @Dis-Emboweled Рік тому +50

    The 300 straight six was my first realization that tourqe is freaking awesome! Had one in my 81 Bronco 4 speed and in 4-low it was a BEAST! Thanks for taking me back down memory lane!

    • @HappyHarryHardon
      @HappyHarryHardon Рік тому +6

      I had one in a 86 pickup. I loved that first gear, it pulled that 2 wheel drive beast up 30 degree berms while I was checking railroad tracks. Cake.

    • @TestECull
      @TestECull Рік тому +16

      This engine has permanently altered my perception of power to the point I don't consider an engine to have any power what-so-ever if it doesn't pull like a freight train at 1600RPM. An engine can make all the numbers it wants on the north end of the tach but if it doesn't pull worth a fuck at 1600 I will straightfacedly say it has no power.

    • @TestECull
      @TestECull Рік тому +16

      @@HappyHarryHardon My 85 has 2.49 rear gears and the wide ratio 4-speed manual. I can hit 40mph in first gear, 70 in 2nd, and yet despite the super long legs it will STILL pull a 7,000 pound trailer without a care in the world. STILL manage to out-pull its suspension, brakes.
      I've heard some guys call these a diesel with spark plugs. I'm inclined to agree.

    • @dertmatyui
      @dertmatyui Рік тому +2

      @@TestECull 40 in first is crazy, I can barley hit 20😂

    • @alb12345672
      @alb12345672 Рік тому

      @@TestECull 85 4.9L says it has 223ft lbs at 1600. My 96 Explorer with the 4.0 OHV has 220ft lbs at 2000 RPM. Both develop torque very low like a Diesel.
      I have 4.10 gears, feels very torquey! The EFI 4.9s look like Torque Monsters.

  • @jimmydavis550
    @jimmydavis550 Рік тому +6

    I'm a Mopar guy, but I came to love this Ford engine. It's so unbelievably tough! That 4.9 you tore down has to been run more than 400,000 miles. I've seen them go 450,000 miles before a rebuild if they've been well taken care of.

  • @billinhouston3291
    @billinhouston3291 6 місяців тому +1

    I learned about engines by working in an auto parts store in the late 80s. The engine was like home. No complicated alloy frames or balance shaft capsules or overhead cams. Just lots of iron and steel. I was a skinny dude, and carrying heads and cranks for these engines just about did me in. Great episode, sir.

  • @aaw376
    @aaw376 Рік тому +7

    After watching this video. I now miss my 1979 F-150 rust bucket, with the 300 and 3 on the tree. Great video. The 300 was a tough, probably the toughtest ford motor ever built.

    • @TestECull
      @TestECull Рік тому

      Toughest OHV, but I think the venerable Flathead V8 is right there alongside it for overall. I'd give a tie between the two.

  • @TestECull
    @TestECull Рік тому +20

    31:01 With a 300 there is a not-zero chance it will just simply stop turning without being damaged. Take plugs out, spin it till the chambers are clear, put plugs back in, fire it back up, carry on. They really are THAT tough. They will survive swallowing pond water.
    A fella really has to be deliberately trying to kill one of these things and even then it's gonna be a challenge. Why we love them so much!

    • @shortmoneytrucker964
      @shortmoneytrucker964 Рік тому

      I put the hurt on my 240 in a '70 F100. it rattled and what not yet it would start, sometimes reluctantly, on cold WI mornings when not much else would. The engine lasted longer than the Warner 3 speed behind it.

    • @silasakron4692
      @silasakron4692 7 місяців тому +1

      I hydrolocked one in a mire at close to 12,000ft in elevation (totally my fault). Pulled the plugs, blew the water out of the cylinders, changed the oil and it fired right back up, but with a knock. Wheeled it down off the mountain and then drove about 75 miles back to the city. Fairly certain I bent a rod and that thing was really only running on 5 cylinders during the trip back - still got 18 mpg and the rod knock quieted considerably. Found another 300 and swapped that in. Probably could have saved the original since it only had about 130k on it, but I only paid $400 for the second engine and it had around 60k on a rebuild. The kicker is that the original engine had something going on in the bottom end when I bought it. It had a strange, barely audible knock at idle that had driven me crazy for years. I think somebody had damaged it long ago and my hydrolock incident was the final straw. I bet a fresh 300 would have survived. Did it fail? No. Never. Ran for years with what was probably low oil pressure and then got me all the way back to civilization in a compromised state without breaking a sweat. Truly impressive.

    • @TestECull
      @TestECull 7 місяців тому +1

      @@silasakron4692 And that's why I firmly believe...to the point I will die on this hill...that the 300 six is the best overhead valve engine Ford has ever and will ever produce. Why I'm all too happy to keep driving one in 2023. They're amazing engines. Tough as nails, reliable, smooth, long lasting, rugged, miserly, torquey...the perfect engine for a half ton truck or a full size car if the hood will allow it to fit.
      They can brag up the ecoboost V6's power and efficiency all they want. I don't care. Gimme a 300 with a Carter YF instead.

  • @ronwitt1
    @ronwitt1 9 місяців тому +1

    Had a 78 f 150 with lots of miles. Had 3 broken piston skirts and it still ran. Couldnt find one in the junk yard so i rebuilt it. Great motor.

  • @reubensandwich9249
    @reubensandwich9249 Рік тому +19

    Thank you Eric for this. Mine has 295k miles so it'll be kicking for a while.

  • @bryanvanhorn6218
    @bryanvanhorn6218 Рік тому +13

    I love this engine. Had one in a '96 F150 and it was bullet proof. If you could get traction, you could climb a tree.

  • @noscopesallowed8128
    @noscopesallowed8128 Рік тому +1

    I love how every video on Ford 300s is just everybody in the comments saying how they've got 17 trips to the Moon and back, 3 lifetimes worth of memories, and 12 oil leaks on their 30 year old daily driver sitting in their driveway. We truly are a cult.
    280k miles on my '94 F150 with the 300 and now a ZF5 and kevlar clutch. Only problems I've ever had with the engine were cracked radiator/hoses and the gear on an aftermarket distributor falling off the shaft and into the oil pan, smog pump seized and water pump changed within the last couple thousand miles. All easy fixes thanks to how accessible everything is. The goal is to try and get it to half a million miles, but the oil pump may put a kink in that plan. Not quite sure yet if changing an oil pump warrants just going ahead and rebuilding the entire engine or not.
    Thanks for the video. Enjoyed watching that.

  • @isaacrcason
    @isaacrcason 6 місяців тому

    Last week I purchased a 1996 F-150 with the 300. It's not in too bad a shape for having 200k miles on it. I've been looking for this type of find for about 7 or 8 years, and it finally happened. This teardown video has really helped me understand what I have on my hands. I plan to take care of it and make the most of this gem of an engine.

  • @Flies2FLL
    @Flies2FLL Рік тому +28

    I had a 240 cubic inch version of this engine in a '66 F100. You keep oil in it, it runs forever.
    Great video!

  • @rustymotor
    @rustymotor Рік тому +15

    That old engine looks like it gave years of service, most likely outlasted the original vehicle it lived in. Thanks for an entertaining video, love your sense of humour, looking forward to the next video!

  • @lotharschiese8559
    @lotharschiese8559 7 місяців тому

    I'm glad that I found you again. I have 1990 van, that sat for a good number of years. 2 months after I started driving it, it started burning blue, so I kept an eye on the oil. Then 6 months later oil was dripping out the tail pipe. Had compression checked and the plugs changed. Found out #5 had zero compression and looks like the oil ring, or rings buggered. Your #5 plug indicated a problem with coolant.

  • @russellrichter3473
    @russellrichter3473 Місяць тому +1

    My dad bought a new f100 heavy duty in 1976 with a 300 4 speed manual transmission as a farm pickup. Pulled stock trailres, anhydrous tanks, grain augers,seed tenders you name it that heavy .5 ton truck did it all. My brother and I learned to drive in it. Ps we beat the absolute shit out of that thing. So was purchased new in 1976 was used on my dad's farm every single day until he retired in 2002 ish and then my brother took over and "inherited" the old ford pickup from dad which he used the same way until 2018 or 2019. At which point it had so many different things wrong with it that repairing it was not financially feasible. 600k plus miles on a farm pulling loads well above its range for nearly 50 years at least 3 clutches multiple alternators and 4? Carburetors. Same engine with one head rebuild and several pushrod replacements. Most bullet proof engine I have ever seen. Pretty much unbreakable if you did even minor routine maintenance.

  • @jonfischer9826
    @jonfischer9826 Рік тому +5

    My first truck was a '92 F-150 Flareside with the 300 and a 'Mazda' 5 speed. Loved that truck except for the few icy days here in North Dallas. She loved 80mph in 5th gear OD on the tollway, and with a dual exhaust it had a note that my trusty old dog knew the sound of before I even turned the corner for home. Sadly, even here in Texas, everything around the 300 was falling a part long before the engine was even 'broken in' at 130k.

  • @joannaatkins822
    @joannaatkins822 Рік тому +25

    Thank you for pulling this lump out of a scrap bin for us!
    I do love a straight six more than I probably should, so I'm looking forward to seeing this teardown :D

  • @stevewthespider
    @stevewthespider Рік тому +13

    Looks to me like a perfect rebuild candidate, of course it needs to be magni fluxed to be sure that there are no cracks in the block or heads and some work done at a machine shop.

  • @peterkruse788
    @peterkruse788 11 місяців тому

    My 300 is a beast , wish they took care of that one . 4.9 love my 96 it just runs . Great channel , love your tear down teaching .

  • @nickknee3515
    @nickknee3515 Рік тому +5

    I live in Maine and I work with a guy that had a late 80's F-150 with one of these engines in it, and like you said these trucks all rust away at a certain point and his was at between 280-290,000 miles when the frame split. But he went through all the trouble to find a clean '96 with no motor from Texas, shipped it up to Maine and he threw that motor in it. Last I knew he racked up 400,000+ miles on that motor and she's still goes as strong as an ox.

  • @clarenceswope6706
    @clarenceswope6706 Рік тому +9

    That 300 straight 6 is a prime example of why maintenance is key on any 300 straight 6 no more than 3,500 Mi interval oil changes and always always always always a good oil

  • @rickgalla3377
    @rickgalla3377 Рік тому

    Great video, and it was an incredible engine, thank u from nyc

  • @carl2591
    @carl2591 Рік тому +1

    Bought a 1992 E 250 extended van from a guy set up with a carpet steam cleaning machine.. With all the stuff inside the van was somewhat heavy.. this set up came with the 4R10e, the predecessor the R4100 trans. On the hwy it got like 16 mpg and 12 around town.. At times it would have 125 gallons of water on board, and still would pull like a fricken cummins 6.7L diesel. The torque was amazing.. Can not image this engine with a 4 barrel and some decent headss.. talk about a classic.. Again fun to watch..
    PS: my wife think I'm nut's watching a rando tear down old/new engines. LOLOLOL... told her it was the best way to see some of the awesome technology used in sometime modern engines.. it truly is amazing at times.. Thanks..

  • @Adam-nv9zo
    @Adam-nv9zo Рік тому +9

    Man, when I saw Ford 300, I thought I was dreaming. I'm probably more excited about this engine most I've ever seen on the channel. What an amazingly simple yet unbelievably reliable engine. I've driven a few of them, but unfortunately, I've never had the opportunity to buy one.

  • @-Mari.0-
    @-Mari.0- Рік тому +17

    I remember binge watching this guy for 6 videos straight. I was deciding if i wanted to go to into engineering and these videos really helped me make my decision ❤

    • @davelowets
      @davelowets Рік тому

      Watching a guy working in the auto salvage industry suddenly made you want to be an engineer?
      Strange.. but OK? 😕

    • @-Mari.0-
      @-Mari.0- Рік тому +4

      @@davelowets can’t believe you took the time out your life to type this

  • @sandleman3006
    @sandleman3006 3 місяці тому

    Great vid! Thanks for sharing.

  • @jarrettknipp5147
    @jarrettknipp5147 Рік тому +4

    Hands down the best engine put in a truck!!! They put them in the F350’s too!

  • @RussSirois
    @RussSirois Рік тому +3

    Finally! I totally understand your struggle to find one, and I'm glad to see it here!

  • @OtherWorldExplorers
    @OtherWorldExplorers Рік тому +3

    Enjoy the fact that you do this every week.
    I know how hard that can be to come up with the content
    What about taking a survey and see if people want to see how you put something together.
    Or maybe see if that they would be up for a live stream.

  • @dj6769
    @dj6769 Рік тому

    Great video I’ve got a 94 4.9L getting ready to pull the engine replace leaking freeze plugs, noisy lifters, reseal oil pan, replace timing gears inspect cam lobes. It doesn’t like to idle smooth and stalls, once it gets going it’s fine I feel the timing gears or cam lobes may be worn. This video gives me a little insight of what to expect thanks!

  • @harlandawson8447
    @harlandawson8447 Рік тому +1

    had a 300 in my 93 ford F-150 ,5 speed ,2 fuel tanks ,huge low speed torque, i had 340,000 miles on it when i sold it ,biggest mistake i ever made ,i loved that ,never had any problems, except 2 cluch replacements

  • @williamkelley7654
    @williamkelley7654 Рік тому +8

    There is almost no doubt this engine would run. I remember gasket slapping headgaskets on them, took about an hour and an oil change, good for another 100K.

  • @kevincurry4735
    @kevincurry4735 Рік тому +7

    Happy Saturday night Eric. Excited to see a 300 broke down. This engine was not given much love but was a fighter.

  • @christownsend7602
    @christownsend7602 Рік тому

    I bought a 1979 E150 van brand new in 1979, still have it by the way, with a 300ci engine and a four on the floor transmission. Very rare combo, the Ford store used to ask me to bring it by to show potential customers who were thinking about buying one. Put almost 200,000 miles on it. With the stock intake and exhaust it maxed out at around 4500 rpm. I installed a Offenhouser 360° intake, a 400 cfm Edelbrock carb and Clifford Research headers, three and three into duals, plus a little more cam and it would easily rev to 6000 rpm. That would be an issue later as I broke a ring gland on #1 piston from too much rpm on an engine with a four inch stroke. Drove in several months that way before doing a compression test and realized the cylinder had zero compression. Thought it was not running exactly right. Still didn't have any trouble towing my 20ft power boat. Awesome engine, still have it but, it has be replaced with a built 460ci and an aftermarket EOD transmission. Now my grandkids get to drive it.

  • @GTV_367
    @GTV_367 11 місяців тому

    Great vids bro🤞🏽

  • @speed150mph
    @speed150mph Рік тому +7

    Why can’t more engines be like these. So simple, so easy to work on.

    • @vorant77
      @vorant77 Рік тому +3

      Blame the EPA

    • @speed150mph
      @speed150mph Рік тому +2

      @@vorant77 I can only blame the epa so far. The rest I blame corporate penny pinching. For example, the epa doesn’t tell them they need to use a cheap belt drive system, that’s a choice. Look at the timing system on this engine. For its entire life you don’t need to worry about a belt or chain that can break or stretch or slip. You don’t have a cover over it that you have to take 5000 bolts and remove 20 parts to get at. This engine could be completely disassembled in about 30 minutes if nothing else was wrong with it because it was designed that way. The EPA doesn’t force car manufacturers to do any of that different.

    • @gavinlee7786
      @gavinlee7786 Рік тому

      Because they make no power and would never pass emissions

  • @brianmccants5098
    @brianmccants5098 Рік тому +14

    Both the 240 and 300 came out in 1965. Great videos! Keep them coming!

  • @cornflake73
    @cornflake73 9 місяців тому

    I had one and it was the best dang motor I ever had. It was tough, didn't use oil, and started in a second. I had a ford truck with a 300 straight 6 in it. The truck rotted out first. I loved it and I wish newer trucks had it in their inventory.

  • @robbyoliver4953
    @robbyoliver4953 Рік тому +4

    I know this engine wouldn’t make a good candidate for a cheap overhaul. But I would love to see it brought back to life. And put in some old pickup I think it would run many more years. These engines are unbelievably tough. But a lot of the older Ford engines are also. My Dad always owned Fords, he used to claim you can’t put a Chevy on flat car and ship it as far as can drive a Ford. I drove more than one for an unbelievable long time myself. Used them hard and they always stood up great.