husky10101
Well-known member
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How do you rotate tires? It's a pain to even get a jack stand on the lift points.This is why I do my own work. I'll be doing all service myself going forward. I can rotate tires and replace the cabin air filter as well as any tech.
I jack from the rear until the front comes off the ground. The frame is pretty stiff, unlike trucks from decades past with open C-channel frames.How do you rotate tires? It's a pain to even get a jack stand on the lift points.
I have two sets of wheels/tires which I have for other reasons but it makes rotations easy. It's probably the most expensive way of doing it short of buying a two post lift though.
Discount tire will do the rotation for free, and they have better lift equipment than I do. I do wish my ICE mechanic would at least do the inspection but they don't want to touch EVs. There are still things that need inspection and maintenance in the suspension systems that I never learned how to do for myself. I guess there's always youTubeThis is why I do my own work. I'll be doing all service myself going forward. I can rotate tires and replace the cabin air filter as well as any tech.
Thank you for the recognition we greatly appreciate it.Discount tire will do the rotation for free, and they have better lift equipment than I do. I do wish my ICE mechanic would at least do the inspection but they don't want to touch EVs. There are still things that need inspection and maintenance in the suspension systems that I never learned how to do for myself. I guess there's always youTube
So we traded ours off at 160 K miles and it was picked up by a collector in NY who got a hold of me a year later and WOW he really is “restoring it!”. 4.6 3-valve V-8 w/slightly under 300 HP and torque. AWD with auto 6 spd. A really fun useful truck that we drove the pants off.I am so fascinated by these cars. I only found out they existed in the last year or two. Doug Demuro NEEDS to review one!
The first thing I'd check for is another dealer within 100 miles. Only if I didn't find one would I bother to check to make sure the tech was fired. Doing this once was dumb. Doing it second after dropping the truck was mind-blowingly stupid. That could have been very da gerous for him and, if it happened with wheel off, damaging to the truck. That sort of next-level stupid manifests itself every single day. Either the dealer sent this guy out to do service in your driveway without ever having seen him work in the shop or they already knew he was dangerously stupid. Either way, the dealership itself was being recklessly stupid itself.Had the dealer out today on a mobile service for a 30,000 mile service (aka tire rotation). Tech only used one jack in the middle of the frame between the two specified jacking points and it slipped off while jacking up and the truck fell down. Sounded like a bomb went off when it fell. The wheels were still on. They then proceeded to try to do it again on the other side and it fell again (I did not know anything about it until I asked about the loud sound at the end).
The dealer is picking it up tomorrow to do an inspection in the shop, but what should I keep an eye out for, especially due to the drop twice and the fact that it was jacked up from the middle instead of the designated jacking points Ford calls out for.
"you CANNOT do the tire rotation with one jack, unless you use the spare tire also."Look in the manual for tire rotation. It tells you to rotate the back tires to the front, and the front tires CROSS to the back. There is no "rotate back to front and front to back". Therefore, you CANNOT do the tire rotation with one jack, unless you use the spare tire also.
F-150s have existed FOREVER. There has never been one jack point for the truck to lift the entire side. This tech needs to be FIRED.
What dealer did you take this to in north Jersey?Can anyone recommend a shop in North Jersey to do an inspection? I got the truck back from them and I might be blowing it out of proportion, but they completed the inspection without taking the plastic cover off for the frame that the tech took off to use the jack. Looking under the truck, this clip looks like where the jack hit as the truck fell once it slipped off. Im sure it’s fine, but it is dented in so I would like to get it checked out by someone else just in case.
And to make matters worse, they rotated the tires wrong while the truck was up in the air!
Not when it doesn't match..."you CANNOT do the tire rotation with one jack, unless you use the spare tire also."
True, but unless you destroyed one tire and replaced it with something mismatched, you really should be including the spare in your rotation, shouldn't you?
I agree with everything you said before the edit. With the wheels on, the truck should be completely undamaged if the jack didn't hit anything as it was tipping over, although from another post by the OP it looks like the jack did hit and dent something.He didn’t hurt anything by lifting it from the center of the frame, but there could be damage to the body if it slammed into the raised jack.
The suspension and everything else should be fine as long as the wheels were on. You should be fine as long as the raised jack didn’t hit the truck as it came down.
ON edit: I worked at Firestone 20 years ago in high school, and we were thought to rotate back to front. Lots of people calling for the head of a guy who made a mistake. He may have been trained to do that, and we all make mistakes. There’s a human at the other end of all of this.
That's exactly why I said "unless you destroyed one tire and replaced it with something mismatched." My comment was also directed to the F-150 Lightning, which comes with a matching spare tire on a matching wheel. As far as I know, all F-150s do.Not when it doesn't match...
We have a full-sized mismatched spare. It is slightly smaller than the other 4 and has it's own limitations that are spelled out in the manual. Some people have replaced it with a real full sized spare.That's exactly why I said "unless you destroyed one tire and replaced it with something mismatched." My comment was also directed to the F-150 Lightning, which comes with a matching spare tire on a matching wheel. As far as I know, all F-150s do.
If you buy a car with a doughnut or no spare, like my Chevy Bolt did and my Tesla does, you obviously can't include a spare in your rotation.
Irrelevant side point: I decided the Bolt needed a spare, but there wasn't room for something the size of one of the Bolt's wheels in the well under the floor of the cargo compartment under the cargo shelf, so I bought a Vredestein Space Master tire and wheel from a Mercedes. Those are stored uninflated and have a substantially smaller diameter before inflation. Because no wheel with the right bolt pattern and centering fit the tire (yes, I could have had something custom drilled), I had to have an adapter plate made. Once I cut out much of the styrofoam that usually fills that compartment, the wheel, tire, adapter plate and high-speed pump fit beautifully in that space like it was made for them. I didn't lose a single cubic inch of storage space. Maybe it the well was for made to hold a similar tire in some market where spare are required.
When I sold that car, I was incredibly disappointed that I'd never gotten a flat in it.