Luke,
Good post, but in OTD's defense, you still only have a fourth party contention that ther were "some frame cracks in Quadcab LWB trucks". This is far from definative proof that there is a frame problem with 3rd gen hydroformed frames IMO. The new frame is stronger and stiffer than the old C-Channel frame. The only POTENTIAL weaknesses would be if the frame was more brittle or prone to "work hardening" OR degradation of strength due to corrosion.
As far as the brittle/work hardening issue goes, I'm afraid I'll need a little more proof other than "somebody talked to so and so who said that..... " considering the complete lack of frame issues on this site.
The corrosion issue MAY become an issue in the future, but there is more to a frame's corrosion resistance potential than thickness. Metal type and quality, coatings and number and location of drain holes are among the variables. Many frames in the past were simply raw steel and started to rust immediately. In addition most cars these days don't even have frames and the unibody construction is orders of magnitude thinner than our hydroformed frames, yet you don't see 7 or 8 year old Civics and such with rust caused structural failures (yes I know they don't haul 5ers!)
Anybody remember the 1980 Ford "swiss cheese" frame fiasco? I remember several F-250's owned by local logging companies that had frame damage (bent).
Anyway Luke, I am not trying to be argumentative or question you honesty or intelligence by any means, but I have yet to be convinced that there is a frame issue on my '03 or 04. 5 Dodge.
Good luck with your Ford. You did your research and purchased accordingly.
Cheers,
Dave
Good post, but in OTD's defense, you still only have a fourth party contention that ther were "some frame cracks in Quadcab LWB trucks". This is far from definative proof that there is a frame problem with 3rd gen hydroformed frames IMO. The new frame is stronger and stiffer than the old C-Channel frame. The only POTENTIAL weaknesses would be if the frame was more brittle or prone to "work hardening" OR degradation of strength due to corrosion.
As far as the brittle/work hardening issue goes, I'm afraid I'll need a little more proof other than "somebody talked to so and so who said that..... " considering the complete lack of frame issues on this site.
The corrosion issue MAY become an issue in the future, but there is more to a frame's corrosion resistance potential than thickness. Metal type and quality, coatings and number and location of drain holes are among the variables. Many frames in the past were simply raw steel and started to rust immediately. In addition most cars these days don't even have frames and the unibody construction is orders of magnitude thinner than our hydroformed frames, yet you don't see 7 or 8 year old Civics and such with rust caused structural failures (yes I know they don't haul 5ers!)
Anybody remember the 1980 Ford "swiss cheese" frame fiasco? I remember several F-250's owned by local logging companies that had frame damage (bent).
Anyway Luke, I am not trying to be argumentative or question you honesty or intelligence by any means, but I have yet to be convinced that there is a frame issue on my '03 or 04. 5 Dodge.
Good luck with your Ford. You did your research and purchased accordingly.
Cheers,
Dave