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What I’ve Learned Maintaining My Super Duty (F-250 / F-350) After Heavy Use
Hey guys,
Been running my Super Duty mostly for hauling and some towing over the past couple of years, and just wanted to share a few things I’ve learned that might help others — especially if you’re using your truck for real work, not just daily driving.
1. Oil changes matter more than you think
If you're towing or hauling regularly, don’t follow the “normal interval.” I started doing oil changes around every 5k miles instead of stretching it. Trucks under heavy load break oil down faster.
2. Fuel system = expensive mistakes
On diesel trucks, bad fuel or contamination can mess up injectors and even the whole system. Keeping filters fresh (every ~15k miles) has saved me headaches.
3. Keep an eye on front-end wear
If you start seeing uneven tire wear or slight steering vibration, don’t ignore it. Alignment, tie rods, or suspension components can wear out faster on heavy-duty use.
4. Fluids are everything
Transmission, coolant, brake fluid — all of it. These trucks run hot when working hard, and skipping fluid checks can lead to bigger issues later.
5. Don’t skip basic inspections
Tire rotation, brake checks, and quick visual inspections every service interval go a long way in preventing downtime.
Honestly, these trucks are built tough, but they’re not “maintenance-free,” especially if you’re actually using them like a Super Duty should be used 💪
Curious what others here are doing differently — any tips or things you’ve learned the hard way?
Been running my Super Duty mostly for hauling and some towing over the past couple of years, and just wanted to share a few things I’ve learned that might help others — especially if you’re using your truck for real work, not just daily driving.
1. Oil changes matter more than you think
If you're towing or hauling regularly, don’t follow the “normal interval.” I started doing oil changes around every 5k miles instead of stretching it. Trucks under heavy load break oil down faster.
2. Fuel system = expensive mistakes
On diesel trucks, bad fuel or contamination can mess up injectors and even the whole system. Keeping filters fresh (every ~15k miles) has saved me headaches.
3. Keep an eye on front-end wear
If you start seeing uneven tire wear or slight steering vibration, don’t ignore it. Alignment, tie rods, or suspension components can wear out faster on heavy-duty use.
4. Fluids are everything
Transmission, coolant, brake fluid — all of it. These trucks run hot when working hard, and skipping fluid checks can lead to bigger issues later.
5. Don’t skip basic inspections
Tire rotation, brake checks, and quick visual inspections every service interval go a long way in preventing downtime.
Honestly, these trucks are built tough, but they’re not “maintenance-free,” especially if you’re actually using them like a Super Duty should be used 💪
Curious what others here are doing differently — any tips or things you’ve learned the hard way?
We run a fleet from f-150s to 750s, bunch of Yahoo drivers and I'm happy if they don't put gasoline in a diesel.
I would agree with everything you say but we do 7,500 miles intervals on oil changes, 15,000 on fuel/ tire rotations/ inspections.
You missed out on the idling part, I have 15 minute intervals set on the GPS for alerts.
Overly Clean Structure: The post uses a rigid, bullet-point formula (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) with a clear opening, summary, and closing question. It is far more organized than a typical, quick, stream-of-consciousness forum post.
"Corporate Casual" Tone: AI often adopts a "safe," polite, and enthusiastic, yet bland tone (e.g., "...saved me headaches.""...don't ignore it.""...go a long way..."). It lacks unique, slang-heavy personal voice or specific personal anecdotes.
Overused AI Phrases: Phrases like "Fluids are everything,""Fuel system = expensive mistakes," or "Honestly, these trucks are built tough" sound authoritative but are very generic.
Generic Emojis: Ending with a single relevant emoji ("💪") is a common AI tactic to appear human and casual.
Perfect Grammar: Despite being a casual post, there are no typos, missing apostrophes, or awkward phrasing, which is suspicious in a casual forum post.
Overly Clean Structure: The post uses a rigid, bullet-point formula (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) with a clear opening, summary, and closing question. It is far more organized than a typical, quick, stream-of-consciousness forum post.
"Corporate Casual" Tone: AI often adopts a "safe," polite, and enthusiastic, yet bland tone (e.g., "...saved me headaches.""...don't ignore it.""...go a long way..."). It lacks unique, slang-heavy personal voice or specific personal anecdotes.
Overused AI Phrases: Phrases like "Fluids are everything,""Fuel system = expensive mistakes," or "Honestly, these trucks are built tough" sound authoritative but are very generic.
Generic Emojis: Ending with a single relevant emoji ("💪") is a common AI tactic to appear human and casual.
Perfect Grammar: Despite being a casual post, there are no typos, missing apostrophes, or awkward phrasing, which is suspicious in a casual forum post.
I was just going to say this is a bunch of platitudes that looks generated by AI.....No original thoughts
We run that all of our 6.7s, Kenworth's, CAT equipment, and my favorite.......Isuzu trucks, hate those SOBs
When I ran my own truck, I religiously ran Rotella T 15w40, changed every 15000mi. We had it in for a bad injector at about 800K, mechanic said the overhead looked like it had about 200K on it. (N14 Cummins.)
I run Mobil 1 in whatever weight the manufacturer says in my gassers... Ford just happens to like 5w30 for both of my trucks.