this post was submitted on 17 Sep 2024
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Automotive Repair
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In the shop, under the hood, and between the valves. A place for showcasing busted knuckles, discussing the regrettable career choice, and finding out where the tick noise is coming from.
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got it.
ignition coils spring to mind in that case also, and you have to remove them to get to the spark plugs anyway on the f150
a bad ignition coil could cause the non-sparking issue.
spark plugs, ignition coils, starter solenoid, then starter motor is the order I'd go.
If you're going to replace all the plugs anyway and you have the cash, replacing each ignition coil as you go rather than popping the old ones back in isn't going to hurt, especially if the truck's near 100k miles.
spark plugs are more likely to fail and fail sooner, so if you want to try switching them out first, also no harm there.
it'll end up being whichever is at the bottom of your checklist, of course, but the sudden failure has me leaning toward a single electrical point of failure rather than fuel delivery.
I think at this time I'll swap out the sparks. Just as I've already done so much. Coils will be on my list though.
I had tried everything I could think of and ended up taking it to a shop.
They ended up fixing it in a day.
The issue? The grounding wire was corroded.
whoa!
congratulations, I'm glad it's working again.
thanks for letting me know, now I'm watching F-150 videos about corroded grounding wires.
not an uncommon problem, apparently.