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Lincoln LS 3.9 engine problem

lbuesslbuess Member Posts: 2
I have a 2000 3.9 V8. One evening I backed my car up about 10 ft. turned it off and about 15 minutes later started it and pulled it forward to where it had been. The next morning I could not start the engine. My local LM looked at it and informed me that the engine was turning over but not firing. The timing was correct but a compression test showed very low compression - below the compression needed to fire. They put oil in each cylinder and started the car. They informed me that I needed to replace the engine (about $7,000 installed) and that they have had several Lincoln LS's with this engine with the same problem at about the same mileage as mine. It is supposed to be a Jaguar engine according to them. The mechanic thinks the rings are sticking due to varnish and that nothing can be done to repair the engine. I have always used premium fuel and synthetic oil. I trust this dealer and have been their customer for several years. Has anyone else experienced this problem and is there anything that can be done about it short or an overhaul or engine replacement? How about additives? The car now starts fine and as far as I can tell uses no oil and accelerates like a scalded dog.
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Comments

  • akirbyakirby Member Posts: 8,062
    Sounds like horse hockey to me. I know plenty of LS owners with over 100K miles and none have this problem. Varnish comes from gasoline sitting undisturbed for a long time. If you believe the poor compression diagnosis I'd suspect a bad head gasket or bad head first. If it was losing compression past the rings you'd have a cloud of smoke coming out of the exhaust and it would be using oil like crazy. It also would not fail all of a sudden.

    Hate to say it but I think you need a new mechanic.
  • brucelincbrucelinc Member Posts: 815
    You started the car briefly a couple of times. It was running rich as it should on a cold start. Fuel washed a bit of oil off the cylinder walls and compression was temporarily lost. (maybe, or it might have just been flooded)

    I think this was a fluke and your shop is wrong. If the compression is so low as to not start, you would be using oil, smoking, etc. I would drive it and watch the oil and coolant levels for awhile just to make sure nothing is awry.

    Sounds like a false alarm to me.
  • lrjrlrjr Member Posts: 3
    Several months ago I had car jacked up with stands under the front. I had to remove wheel well cover to gain access to replace the coolant reservoir tank, which had lots of very small cracks below coolant level. The car was jacked up for a couple days while waiting to get the correct part. After the replacement was complete and car on ground I went to start the engine, however it would not start. I seems as if the battery was dead, etc. Checked battery was fine. I kept on trying several times to get it to turn over. Finally it did turn over and fire up, but it made odd noise, and lots of smoke came out of the exhaust pipe. This is something that has never happened before nor sense. I feel like somehow it was related to some sort of liquid block on top of one of the cylinders, because the back of engine was at an angle while jacked up. This was a year ago, but had not talked to anyone who knew the answer. Since a year has passed, now the car seems to be using a little oil, which is unusual for it. Occasionally now when the engine is started when hot, a cloud of white looking smoke can be seen behind the car. After than nothing. It sounds like the valve stem seals are leaking, thereby allowing oil to drain down when engine is off, then upon startup burns off the oil. One final thought, recently at routine oil change, I put in Mobile 1 5-w20. I had previously used a higher weight oil. Have used synthetic since 2005, have not had any problems with smoke nor oil useage.

    I know this is a lot to cover at one time, any help will certainly be appreciated. I am new to the forum so this is my first post. I've read lots of post and gained lots of useful information related to this car. Thanks for your help. LR
  • akirbyakirby Member Posts: 8,062
    I wouldn't worry about the no-start condition - it was probably a glitch in the anti-theft system. I also don't think jacking up the car did anything to the engine. I assume since you were replacing the coolant bottle that you had a leak - did the engine ever run hot or go into limp-home mode? It sounds to me like you have a leaking head gasket. White smoke is the biggest clue. Burning oil smoke is blue, not white. White means water or coolant. Black is fuel. Have the cylinder compression checked and/or check for coolant in the oil.
  • jhaberbergerjhaberberger Member Posts: 4
    I hzve a 2000 LS and the engine has an intermittent miss. It usually occurs when I'm going uphill at 40 to 50 mph, and it's in 5th gear. The engine RPM's are between 1500 and 1900. If I had to guess I'd say the engine management system is leaning the fuel out too much. I've taken it to the dealer several times with no success. Has anyone else had this problem?
  • jcorwin1jcorwin1 Member Posts: 6
    Yes my car also was doing the same thing. Are you having a rough idle too? I had two bad coils #4 and #3. Also i had the whole fuel system cleaned, replaced spark plugs and replaced fuel filter. It now runs really good.
  • jhaberbergerjhaberberger Member Posts: 4
    I.ve had several coils replaced, the fuel system flushed, and tried several different brands of plugs, but it has the miss.
  • brucelincbrucelinc Member Posts: 815
    You indicated that you had several coils replaced. I presume the dealer did a stress test to isolate the correct coils? I am still suspicious of the coils that you have not changed.

    Bad coils don't always have the same symptoms. The first time I had one go bad, the car idled perfect and was fine under hard acceleration but had a miss under light load - 40-50 in 5th gear and accelerating gently. With the 2nd one that failed, the car ran fine under load but had a misfire at idle. Both of these occurrances happened within a month of each other and ironically both were on the passenger side.

    About 6 months later, it developed a misfire under hard acceleration. This time, I decided to replace the remaining 6 coils myself. The store where I bought the coils only had 2 in stock so I just replaced the 2 remaining on the passenger side. That fixed it and it has run perfectly for the last year. I still haven't replaced any on the drivers side but I will replace all 4 on that side if I ever have another problem. The dealer indicated that they typically fail one at a time.
  • jeyhoejeyhoe Member Posts: 490
    bruce;

    Stupid question maybe, but I'll ask anyway - are the Coil-On-Plugs (COPs) replaceable without replacing the spark plug? Or is it a FRU that is sold and replaced as a unit? How much is a COP?
  • akirbyakirby Member Posts: 8,062
    Yes, the cops are totally separate from the spark plugs. They just sit on top. I think they're $45-$65 depending on where you get them.
  • jeyhoejeyhoe Member Posts: 490
    OK Thanks.

    Yeah, I just saw where gregg replaced his plugs with platinums. It's good I can doa tuneup for only the cost of the plugs. And I'm sure the aggravation of actually getting to one or more of them.
  • jhaberbergerjhaberberger Member Posts: 4
    Thanks for all the help guys. Something else occurred to me, do many other engines have covers over their coils as the LS does? Could excess heat be cooking these things? Just a thought.
  • brucelincbrucelinc Member Posts: 815
    That thought has occurred to me, as well. Many other engines do not have the covers over the coils. I don't know if that is the whole reason for coil failure or not, though. There were some problems with valve cover sealing around the spark plug wells and when they fill with oil, the coils fail. Mine were dry as a bone but coils still failed - although it took 100,000 miles for them to do so.

    My '94 T'bird with the 4.6 had spark plug wire failures. It was not COP but the wires went deep into the head to reach the plugs and had a seal on top of the well. I always thought heat was a problem for that application, too.
  • lrjrlrjr Member Posts: 3
    Hi: Just read your post. My wifes' Lincoln LS is doing the same exact things too. I haven't taken it in to the mechanic yet, but have got to do so soon. It isn't missing, it just pings quite loud when going up an incline of almost any angle to speak of. It idles great. Another mechanic said due to its mileage of 78,000 it might need to be de-carbonized. I thought I would check in to that. Will let you know what happens. Please keep me in the loop too if you dont mind. Regards, Larry
  • jhaberbergerjhaberberger Member Posts: 4
    I finally broke down and let the dealer replace the valve cover on the left side. I replaced the right one myself about 2 years ago. I actually tried the left myself but ended up shedding too much blood trying to get to all the bolts. Anyway, they replaced the gasket and yet another coil and now it seems to run fine. I'll keep you all posted.
  • boolove2boolove2 Member Posts: 1
    could someone please help me, I have a 2000 lincoln ls, v6, have been driving fine, all of a sudden I start to drive and the car starts to skip, it didnt shut off and continues to drive but it really sounds rough, I'm afraid to drive it , so i can get it checked
  • akirbyakirby Member Posts: 8,062
    In this order - PCV valve, COPS, fuel pump/filter.
  • BosephisBosephis Member Posts: 4
    sounds like a bunch of bs the dealer is feeding you i have one with 227 k on it and it seems to run fine.i will say this i have found tat running marvel mystery oil in any car does seem to help the the internal parts i put it in mine and in the gas as well.had couple of other cars was ticking and i dumped that in there and it killed the ticking problem.
  • 2005LS2005LS Member Posts: 1
    I have a 2005 Lincoln LS with about 34,000 miles. The car has been to the dealership about 3 times for this problem. I believe something is wrong. The dealership keeps telling all engine tests pass. The problem can be heard when accelerating and going up a hill. I am afraid that I might be damaging the engine. The engine sound can not be normal. Please advise.
  • ronron1ronron1 Member Posts: 1
    I have great difficulty removing the air cleaner from my 2002 LS V8.
    The owners manual makes it look easy, but thats not the case.
    Any help would be appreciated.
  • wifeslswifesls Member Posts: 1
    I am also having the misfire condition reoccurring with my 2001 ls with 167000 miles. According to the computer, the misfire is random on all but 2 cylinders. The computer is also giving a catalyst code. I have been putting off that repair because of the cost of catalytic converters (i cannot find any aftermarket). I am beginning to think that because the catalyst is not working properly that it is causing a rich condition to occur and flooding the engine under load at that rpm. Any thoughts? Oh i have had this car at the dealer and my personal mechanic, and have replaced the plugs and valve cover gaskets.
  • leadfoot4leadfoot4 Member Posts: 593
    At 167,000 miles, I wouldn't doubt that the "cats" could be a problem however I'd check the O2 sensors first. They are part of the mixture control network, and a lot cheaper to replace. My 2000 LS, with only 57,000 miles currently, had an O2 sensor get "lazy" last year, and would set the CEL every so often. Two new sensors (did it myself), and I was back in business.
  • cmaxcmax Member Posts: 17
    I have a miss which occurs intermitently(2000 LS) I have replaced 3 coils in the past around 78000 miles ,Themostat around 85000 miles The miss occurs around 40 to fifty mph uphill or flat but not all the time. The question is ' Is there a mile marker for replacing the timeing chain or gear and any thing else .
  • cmaxcmax Member Posts: 17
    How many miles has anyone driven their LS 2000 or what can i expect out of mine. I drove a 97 t bird 379000 before a simi to it out without any major issues, Any input would help this car is expensive to maintain but i like it I have presently just over 100,000 miles on it.
  • dan193dan193 Member Posts: 1
    My 2001 lsv8 idles rough and skips between 40 and 50 mph. It has 120,000. My mechanic says I have no compression in the back cylinder drivers side. He said because of manufacture type that engine cannot be rebuilt and has to be replaced. He also said the best thing is to get rid of the car. My question is, can I replace the engine with a 4.6 or 5.0 without replacing the auto trans or rewelding motor mounts? Also, is he right that these are throw away engines?
  • cmaxcmax Member Posts: 17
    So the mech said everything else is doing its thing.
  • akirbyakirby Member Posts: 8,062
    The rough idle/skip is usually caused by bad COPs, but that wouldn't account for the lack of compression. The engine can most certainly be rebuilt - there's nothing magic about it. You can't easily replace it with a different engine because it's all computer controlled and intertwined. You'd want to get another 2000-2002 3.9L V8.
  • toomanyfumestoomanyfumes Member Posts: 1,019
    Right, a 4.6.or 5.0.won't fit. Also, like he said, you would need a first gen (2000-2002) engine.
    2012 Mustang Premium, 2013 Lincoln MKX Elite, 2007 Mitsubishi Outlander.
  • akirbyakirby Member Posts: 8,062
    Actually, a 4.6L will fit - from the top. The engineers built one around 2002 and even took some LS owners for a ride on the test track. But it wouldn't fit from the bottom due to some suspension pieces so it wouldn't work on the assembly line.

    There are simply too many things that have to work together with the PCM to do an engine swap. Not like the old days when everything was mechanical and stand-alone.
  • explorerx4explorerx4 Member Posts: 19,250
    years ago we had a 96 sho that would do the same thing. it usually happened when it would it was pulled into the garage after washing it.
    first time we called AAA and they got it started.
    after that, i would just keep cranking it, within reason, i think with the gas pedal depressed. there may be something about a no start situation in the owner's manual.
    when it fired, it would blow out some smoke, but was ok after that.
    2023 Ford Explorer ST, 91 Mustang GT vert
  • toomanyfumestoomanyfumes Member Posts: 1,019
    Yeah I haven't seen anyone on the Lincoln forums that have done the 4.6 swap. That may be because of the computer issues, though.
    2012 Mustang Premium, 2013 Lincoln MKX Elite, 2007 Mitsubishi Outlander.
  • akirbyakirby Member Posts: 8,062
    You'd be better off adding a supercharger or swapping in a Jag S-type regular or supercharged engine.
  • akirbyakirby Member Posts: 8,062
    Bruce's problem happened almost 2 years ago. He just became the proud owner of an ecoboost 365 hp MKS.
  • explorerx4explorerx4 Member Posts: 19,250
    maybe it will help someone else? :blush:
    2023 Ford Explorer ST, 91 Mustang GT vert
  • brucelincbrucelinc Member Posts: 815
    Actually, it never happened to me or my LS. However, years ago when I worked in the service department of a Ford dealership, we would have cars towed in that would not start on a bitter cold morning. Occasionally, they would be so flooded by the owner pumping the accelerator that the oil would be washed off the cylinder walls and there would be little or no compression. After getting them started and restoring the thin oil film on the rings, the compression would be fine.

    Of course, my experience was before the days of fuel injection. I don't know if could happen with today's cars or not but I think the point I was making 2 years ago was that it might be possible.
  • lbuesslbuess Member Posts: 2
    I have taken a long time to tell you how correct you were about my problem and the dealer's diagnosis. (See post 1) The car has started fine since I had this problem, still burns no oil and runs great. I now have 167,000 on the car and it feels like its just now broken in. I notice others have also had a dealer tell them they have no compression in some of their cylinders and am wondering if their cylinders have also somehow been washed of a little oil. Thanks for the help.
  • brucelincbrucelinc Member Posts: 815
    Glad to hear everything worked out!! It always pays to consider the simplest things first before diving into the wallet. I really liked the 3.9 in my LS. It never burned a drop of oil and other than coil failures, it always ran like a champ.
  • donnanharolddonnanharold Member Posts: 4
    When I tried to start my car it made a sound like a car makes when someone turns the key on a car that is already running. I turned it off then tried again. Now it makes a single click and all the gauges jump to the right and then back down. After this I noticed what appears to be coolant leaking from the driver side manifold pipe in the area of the front seat. It is leaking at a connection from the bottom. Doesn't appear to be wet on top. Is it possibly the starter went out? What about the leak. No water in the oil and the car ran fine earlier. Didn't overheat or act up at all. We have spent so much on this car. Please say this doesn't sound as terrible as we fear.
  • akirbyakirby Member Posts: 8,062
    I'm guessing dead battery. The leak may be totally unrelated. Try jumping it and if that doesn't work then it may be more serious.
  • donnanharolddonnanharold Member Posts: 4
    We did try to jump it and it did the same thing. Forgot to say that. Like how much more serious? We are waiting for a call back from a mechanic we know but waiting is miserable. Do you know how to try to turn the engine by hand? Also what about the starter? Is it possibly that and if so where is the starter? I usually do any repairs on my car unless it's just too complicated or takes special tools or knowledge. My husband has total faith in me doing it but I've never done a starter before so any info would be great. Also, I know this car has certain safety mechanisms to keep you from doing further damage to your car. Any possibility it is keeping me from starting it for this reason?
  • akirbyakirby Member Posts: 8,062
    If jumping it didn't work I'd certainly look at the starter first. It's usually on the lower passenger side of the engine but I don't know for sure. Once you find it, try tapping it with a hammer. I'd certainly try replacing the starter and/or battery first. Anything beyond those would be internal to the engine and not a simple fix.
  • cmaxcmax Member Posts: 17
    Need more descrition is it turning by the starter or is the starter not working at all
  • cmaxcmax Member Posts: 17
    Do not get excited yet,Mechanic should be able to drop starter and check flywheel In older cars there were in line fuses Suspect starter at this point DO NOT JUMP START MAKE SURE BATTERY IS CHARGED OR IS HOLDING CHARGE
  • donnanharolddonnanharold Member Posts: 4
    Is it possible for the starter going out to have anything to do with coolant leaking from the manifold pipe? My dad thinks cracked head or blown head gasket and that it won't start cuz of a blown piston. It never ran hot or bad tho so it would be strange for this to happen out of the blue, wouldn't it?
  • donnanharolddonnanharold Member Posts: 4
    When I turn the key all the gauges on the dash jump over to the right then go back down. It only makes a single click so the starter definitely is not turning. Can I turn the moror by hand to be sure it didn't lock up?
  • akirbyakirby Member Posts: 8,062
    You can but I can't tell you how to do it. If you really do have coolant leaking from the engine then it sounds like the engine is fubar. See if you can tell where the coolant is leaking from and get the starter checked just to be safe.
  • noname0387noname0387 Member Posts: 1
    Be rough with it, it's the only way to get it on/off quick.I put a k&n direct fit filter in and thats even harder because the rubber gasket is thicker.Loosen screw to air cleaner cover,undo both clips then lift that side and push towards front of the car.good luck
  • alfradodgreatalfradodgreat Member Posts: 1
    My Lincoln only has 68000 miles on it and it has a bad miss and it is making a noise in the center on the engine under the manifold. I have replaced three coil packs and that did not fix the problem. It run great when I drive it. There is no hesitating or anything. I have had it up to 90 mile an hour and it continued to excel. All the gauges are reading like they should. I had one machanic look at it and he said it sounds internal and recommended a new engine. But this car to good for it to be the engine. any suggestions?
  • cmaxcmax Member Posts: 17
    I do not know a whole lot about the newer engines but the 3.9 in the lincoln ls and or t bird is a one of a kind.I am not sure what they were thinking when they built these cars.The 3.9 apprently was not used in any thing else and trhe car has 2 fuel pumps,8 coils,a air supply system that sucks and has more creaks and growns than a nursing home.YET ford bas9ically on shas one complaint listed as a problem and the only recall is that a wheeel could fall off.Its is a vbery frustrating car to figure out and most mechanics (ford included) give them a wide birth>However if you like the car none of this matters.The 3.9 can shut off with one coil pack not firing during mild acceleration and it does not matter if your in traffic in a dangerous area or not,it will just shut down.The cat. if it is a California spec car will cost you the price of an arm if you lucky.Again however if you like the car this is not important.The cat . if it goes bad could create a multitude of problems which is common among a lot of cars.The car will not drive just fine if you have a miss.You did not say if you had a warning light or not. Everything starts at $500.00 not including labor.The lincoln ls
  • akirbyakirby Member Posts: 8,062
    The 3.9L engine is based on the Jaguar AJV8 - it's not "one of a kind". The coils are the same as most modern engines. The gas tank is split thus the 2 fuel pumps. The hydraulic cooling fan was new and not a good idea but it was done out of necessity because there wasn't enough electrical power to run an electric fan initially. It is quirky but that's part of the charm.
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