Seems somewhat normal for a solid front axle steering setup. Mine doesn’t have play, but it’s not going to be as precise as a small car or even another trick with independent front suspension. Leveled with 37s
That’s a good point! Thanks for the comment. I don’t think I did a good enough job explaining the situation in the video. My bad. I’ve always had the loose solid axle steering feel, but recently it got a lot worse, like worse than a 95 350 I used to drive 😂
Thanks for the comment. It ended up being my track bar. Top bushing was shot. What did you replace your steering box with though? I’d be curious as it’s something I’m sure I’ll have to do at some point…
I have the same issue on my new 2023 F-450 limited with only 280 miles on it. The service person at the Ford dealership drove it and said it was fine. I plan on taking to a different dealership.
I have a 2014 F450 cab and chassis that feels like when pulling a trailer the rear end feels loose when the trailer is pushing. I found a worn lower ball joint and tie rod end I’m going to replace and hope it fixes the problem. One thing to remember, when you talk about not towing or hauling heavy loads, these still carry a lot of weight just the truck itself. Big road tractors that don’t haul heavy loads daily still wear out, maybe not as fast, but the weight of the vehicle will wear these components. Mine has 185k, and has been loaded or towing every time it leaves the driveway.
@@powerstrokemaintenance oh I have them but haven’t had a chance to replace them, I know they will have to help because with it jacked up between both parts the wheel moves probably 3/4” with a pry bar.
I had ball joints and tierods and drag link replace. Then I all of a sudden couldn't hold it on the road so much play in steering. So now I replaced the steering box. It helped a little bit but it is still very slopy Steering. It's abit un nerving. Still don't k own his to fix it. I also have 356,000 miles on my truck
Crazy I think my pump just went literally when you posted this. 17 f250 6.7 with 107k miles. Had 38s for 40k-ish miles and now 35.5s for another 40k miles. Funny enough I drove it home on the freeway and couldn’t tell it went out. But surface streets it felt like was putting all 250lbs into making 90* turns😂. Anyway good luck with fixing the play issue. It’s always been a thing and just know 100k miles is when shit is designed to break right after warranty’s are up😢😂
Interesting! How are you planning to fix the pump issue? Are there any aftermarket options or just ford pumps? Agreed on the steering. Mines always been loose feeling but recently it just got REALLY loose. I just don’t know how to quantify or explain that 😂
I have a 2019 f250 super duty four-wheel drive with the same problem and it has been worked on. It's only got 17,000 mi on it and I've had it in the shop four times. Just to let you know it's not a unique problem. I guess it's pretty,
I’ve been having a similar problem, it’s on 35s. Just spent over 1000 bucks for new steering components including a dual stabilizer. At highway speeds it still has play, it’s frustrating.
Thanks for the comment. It’s a frustrating issue. What brand of new steering components did you go with? I ended up installing the PMF track bar and apex steering linkage kit. Truck is rock solid now. No play or death wobble
@jimdye7431 no problem. And it wasn’t the steering box. It turned out to be the track bar. The joints were completely worn out. If yours hasn’t been replaced I’d check that for sure!
Very interesting.. I also notice a little play on my f250 and it bugs me as well, I just ordered the Carli adjustable track bar and torsion sway bar, I’m just winging it with these parts so we will see if it improves or not. My truck is leveled with 35 inch tires as well and I have the fox ATS front stabilizer, I’m curious to see what your bro says on the diag. I use my f250 for work, I fix wind turbines and haul around a 8k generator and it’s been great so far, I’ve had my truck for a year, it’s definitely been a dependable work horse for me.
Glad to hear it’s been a good work rig for you! The steering does seem to be a weak point across all of fords trucks. I wouldn’t care so much about it being loose if the parts didn’t already have a tendency to fail haha let me know how you make out with the Carli parts!
@@powerstrokemaintenance hey man that Carli adjustable track bar fixed the wondering on my f250, I highly recommend you look into it. Also it’s good to note that the new track bar gets torqued to 400 ft lbs
Good to know! Thanks so much for sharing that. I just ordered the PMF adjustable track bar and hope to have it installed this week. Which end gets the 400 foot pounds?
I just got my 250. 2019 so 4 years old. I had a Jeep Wrangler with 35's and never had these problems even with worn out parts as I have replaced ball joints and tie rod etc and t didn't seem to make things better and not that they were bad before. Obviously, totally worn out joints could cause this but to me it shouldn't ever be so bad that you get death wobble which I never had but with my Ford it seems a bit looser than what it should be. It's the same steering setup so really no difference and Jeep parts are way smaller than the Ford components. The only difference I see is the steering stabilizer is on the drag link and not the tie rod like a Jeep. It would be interesting to see a bigger stabilizer fixed to the Axle and the tie rod that would potentially dampen the shimmy before it gets to the steering components. I agree that going with a RedHead gear and adding a hydraulic assist cylinder in place of the stabilizer should completely get rid of this. Just my thoughts.
Thanks for the comment. This turned out to be the upper track bar joint. It was completely worn out. Partially my fault as I should’ve replaced it sooner. It just baffles me that parts like that wear out so soon and unexpectedly. I may still do a red head box at some point for the performance. How long have you owned your 2019 f250 for? Did you buy it new?
35" inch tires aren't really "oversized". Sounds like it could be your steering box or the u-joint on the column. If there isn't anything obviously loose, I would go to a junk yard and source a factory steering box from there.
I towed my bumper pull toy hauler with my friends 2015 f350 it was not a good experience it was all over the place he couldn’t even drive his own truck
@powerstrokemaintenance no it works off your main batteries I'll find the video. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-DXDBnlmZDco.htmlsi=_1tgEkrcqIF83okx 1 minute in
Agreed! Solid axle will always feel loose but mine recently just development an excessive amount of play… perhaps I did a poor job of explaining that in the video. My apologies!