> Not here....Its just a dumb switch...no ecm connection. Ill plum a mech
> gage in and compare it to specs........I have not had an issue for a
[quoted text clipped - 9 lines]
>> That sounds awefully familiar as the F150 fix.. Any chance you
>> remember where you may have seen that info?
Got the manual. Its a single wire pressure switch. Im still a bit
perplexed that I had low pressure on the mech gage. It seemed to clear
up and havent been able to duplicate it since. I did install a mech
gage in line with the sender and right now all pressures are well
within normal ranges at idle, 2k and 3k. Sticky relief valve? I have
been told only to use motocraft filter etc......haven't tried that yet.
Ill keep my eye o it a while.
> Have you verified that with a FSM? Seems like the ECM would want to know
> that there is oil pressure, though not necessarily the exact PSI.
[quoted text clipped - 12 lines]
> >> That sounds awefully familiar as the F150 fix.. Any chance you
> >> remember where you may have seen that info?
Whitelightning - 19 Jun 2006 03:46 GMT
> Got the manual. Its a single wire pressure switch. Im still a bit
> perplexed that I had low pressure on the mech gage. It seemed to clear
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
> been told only to use motocraft filter etc......haven't tried that yet.
> Ill keep my eye o it a while.
Sticky relief valve, possible. As to Motorcraft filters,
there is nothing wrong with them, stay away from
Fram, and the bargain basement filters. Wix is a good
brand, Purlolator ok. Questions, where on the block is the
oil pressure sending unit located?, and I might have missed the next,
what oil are you using?
I prefer a good quality mechanical oil pressure gauge,
over an electric one. Manufactures like the electric ones,
I think, because they can never leak oil into the passenger
compartment, and installation on the assembly line is faster.
Whitelightning
SnoMan - 19 Jun 2006 14:21 GMT
>stay away from
>Fram
THere was a time when Fram filter were not the best choice (over 20
years ago) but they make a good filter today and I have run several
vehicles well past 200K miles on them. Even the most expensive oil
filter out there will not mkae up for infrequent oil changes as regual
oil change with quality libe is the key to long life rather than try
to sqeak a little more life out of oil with a high dollar filter.
-----------------
The SnoMan
www.thesnoman.com
Matt Macchiarolo - 19 Jun 2006 23:01 GMT
Ever since Fram was acquired by Allied Signal their quality went down.
There's no way I'll put a Fram on my vehicles again.
>>stay away from
>>Fram
[quoted text clipped - 8 lines]
> The SnoMan
> www.thesnoman.com
David M - 20 Jun 2006 01:55 GMT
>>stay away from
>>Fram
[quoted text clipped - 8 lines]
> The SnoMan
> www.thesnoman.com
http://minimopar.knizefamily.net/oilfilterstudy.html
Not 20 years ago, but as recently as 3 years ago.
Fram does NOT make a good filter.
On my old truck (which I no longer have) switching from a Fram filter to
Purolator quieted the valve train on start-up... the anti drainback valves
in Fram filters are worthless.

Signature
David M (dmacchiarolo)
http://home.triad.rr.com/redsled
T/S 53
sled351 Linux 2.4.18-14 has been up 8 days 27 min
Matt Macchiarolo - 19 Jun 2006 13:14 GMT
Where does the wire go?
> Got the manual. Its a single wire pressure switch. Im still a bit
> perplexed that I had low pressure on the mech gage. >
[quoted text clipped - 16 lines]
>> >> That sounds awefully familiar as the F150 fix.. Any chance you
>> >> remember where you may have seen that info?