...that make people think Fords are terrible.
and they are.
inferior design, and inferior build quality.
its not like its a bad design that works well (*cough* Audi *cough*) its a bad design that fails.
I was at the auto parts store getting some oil Sunday night, and I met this family driving from the coast to Dallas (7 hours in, 4 to go) in a 2004 Ford Explorer with a 4 liter V6, that was overheating. the oil wasn't chocolate milk, and they had already removed the thermostat, and it was still going nuclear as soon as you started it...they didn't have any tools for lease at the auto parts store, and none of the shops in town were open, and none of the mobile mechanics were picking up.
so they were pretty much doomed to stay the night in this shithole little town.
anyways, I pull the water pump off, and it failed in the most "Ford" way EVER.
the impeller is press-fit on the drive shaft, no woodruff key or notch, just stamped on the shaft. with 60k on it, the impeller broke loose from the input shaft, and the impeller started digging into the pump casing, sending debris through the engine.
other notes-
-there were 12 8mm bolts holding the pump on. luckily none stripped or snapped, but they were definitely wimpy to hold a water pump on
-the electronic fan clutch is pointless and prone to failure. there is nothing wrong with a regular one.
-there is no point to mount the fan on the water pump input shaft other than making it so you need a special tool, it could be bolted to the pulley like on *other* american brands
-plastic intake manifold, plastic thermostat housing, plastic radiator, plastic fan, plastic valve covers, plastic bumper...
-this vehicle was involved in a front end wreck at one point, anyone who's worked on a car that's been hit knows the damage is never 100% again. some of the complications, especially the electric fan clutch, could be a result of the wreck. still a stupid design, but may have been less problematic.