Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.
It's kinda early to tell. However the EPA is saying that they cannot enforce it and are kicking enforcement over to the DOJ it seems. I think Ford was foolish for making those engines but after seeing how they engineer stuff over the last 25-30 years, well, it just reinforces my opinion and will probably never own one again.N
Not how that works. CAA is Congressional legislation and isn't going anywhere. GM gets the 5.3 to ULEV50 with DFM and they sell that engine in other markets so there's no point in having multiple versions. Whichever way GM wants to meet the law is up to them. Big gov doesn't require cylinder deactivation but it helps meet the target. Ford went the opposite route for their volume engines (2.7 and 3.5) with smaller displacement and sell relatively few V8s now even though those have cylinder deactivation too.
What little has trickled down to us concerning the new engines for 27/28 indicates they'll still employ the deactivation technology along with cooled EGR which has been on the Ford stuff for a few years now. That's secondhand information from the bosses that attend dealer shows so take it for what it's worth.
Again, that’s not how that works. NAAQS are legislatively mandated by the Clean Air Act and subsequent revisions. Statute of limitations for CAA knowing violations is 5 years so no business operating above board is going run the risk of violating the law.It's kinda early to tell. However the EPA is saying that they cannot enforce it and are kicking enforcement over to the DOJ it seems. I think Ford was foolish for making those engines but after seeing how they engineer stuff over the last 25-30 years, well, it just reinforces my opinion and will probably never own one again.