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"Such A Money Pit": 2019 F-150 Owner Explains Why He Is Finally Done With Ford

A 2019 Ford F-150 owner is breaking up with the brand after cam phaser and transmission failures. Now facing an engine knock, he asks: Where do I go if GM is "dog crap" and Toyota is "overpriced"? Here is his dilemma.
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Author: Denis Flierl

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  • See why a 2019 Ford F-150 owner labels his truck a "money pit" after suffering cam phaser failure at 76,000 miles and a transmission replacement at 101,000.
  • Discover how repeated powertrain issues and engine knocking are forcing long-time Ford loyalists to question the brand's reliability and consider switching to competitors.

Ford F-150 Brand Loyalty Tested

For many truck owners, brand loyalty runs deep, but repeated high-dollar mechanical failures are pushing even the most dedicated Ford fans to the breaking point. The frustration is palpable for Brian Mosley, a member of the Ford F-150 Owners Facebook group, whose experience with his 2019 F-150 3.5L EcoBoost has turned into a financial nightmare. After battling a cascade of well-known powertrain issues, including cam phaser failure and a transmission replacement just out of warranty, Mosley is questioning his future with the Blue Oval.

Brian's situation isn't an isolated incident. I am seeing a growing pattern of long-time owners reaching their limit with these specific failures. In a similar case I reported on recently, An F-150 Owner Won't Buy Another Ford, Says, "I Have Serious Buyers Remorse One Year In, Between the Transmission and the Underpowered Oil Burning Engine", noting that for many, the "Built Ford Tough" slogan is beginning to ring hollow when faced with repair bills that rival the truck's trade-in value.

Mosley's situation highlights the specific mechanical "trifecta" that plagues this generation of F-150s: cam phasers, the 10-speed automatic, and engine knock. As I discussed in my report here, the 10R80 transmission has been a sore spot for years, with harsh shifting and failures occurring well before the expected lifespan of a modern truck.

Mosley writes:

"I have a 2019 Ford F150, 3.5. The Cam Phasers had to be replaced at 76K, covered under warranty. It needed a new 10-speed transmission at 101K, which was not covered under warranty, and now I hear knocking in the engine. How in the world am I going to stay loyal to a company that has turned into a money pit for me? I take care of my vehicles and have not even used this truck much for towing. I know, I should have gotten a 5.0, but that's the same transmission, and other issues. Ford is about to lose me, but where the heck would I go? GM products are dog crap, and Toyota is way overpriced and overrated. Hmmmmmmmmmm."

Brian's 2019 Ford F-150 in the shop for repairs

The "Rock and a Hard Place" Dilemma

When a truck owner loses faith in their primary brand, the emotional instinct is to jump ship immediately. But Brian hits on a painful reality of the modern full-size truck market: there is no perfect sanctuary.

His hesitation about Toyota being "overpriced" is a common refrain. The "Toyota Tax" is real, and for some, the cost of entry is simply too high, despite the promise of better reliability. However, for those who have reached their breaking point with domestic repairs, the switch can be liberating. I chronicled this exact transition in my story, "I Ditched My 2021 Ford F-150 For This Toyota Tundra, Now All My F-150 Repair Problems Are Fixed Forever, Goodbye, I'm Out", where one owner decided the premium price was worth the peace of mind.

Then there is his take on GM: "GM products are dog crap."

Brian is right to be skeptical. If he switches to a Chevrolet Silverado or GMC Sierra to escape Ford's transmission woes, he might just be trading one headache for another. We've seen widespread reports of lifter failures in GM's V8 engines that can be just as catastrophic as Ford's cam phaser issues. I recently covered a story in which a 2024 Chevy Silverado 2500 owner says, "It Broke So Often, I Made GM Buy It Back," proving that the grass isn't always greener on the General Motors side of the fence.

What Other F-150 Owners Are Saying

Brian is far from alone in his frustration. A quick look at recent discussions on social media platforms like Reddit reveals a community divided between loyalty and mechanical exhaustion.

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On a recent Reddit thread discussing 10R80 Transmission Failures, user Tushaca shared a sentiment that mirrors Brian's almost exactly. After multiple replacements, they wrote:

"It's a big enough problem to be considered common... I've had mine replaced three times now. This is the 18th truck I've owned and the only one that's ever given me transmission trouble. Everyone else I know that's had a 17-20 complaint about the same thing (even the ones that haven't failed yet)."

Meanwhile, Brian's hesitation to switch to Toyota is validated by others who have shopped the competition. In a separate discussion comparing the Tundra vs. F-150, user ColdCouchWall warned that the "grass isn't greener" on the Toyota side anymore:

"The new Tundra is ass, I cross shopped both of them, and the new Tundra has a lot more problems. Toyota has taken advantage of its reputation for being reliable and has begun pumping garbage."

These owners confirm Brian's worst fear: The modern truck market is currently a minefield of expensive repairs, regardless of the badge on the grille.

So, where does a frustrated Ford owner go?

Brian has two difficult choices: bite the bullet on the Toyota price tag and hope the new Tundra recalls are sorted, or stick with the "devil he knows" and repair the F-150. It's a frustrating time to be a truck buyer who prioritizes longevity over fancy tech.

It's Your Turn

Brian is stuck in a position no truck owner wants to be in: holding the keys to a vehicle he can no longer trust, while facing a market full of expensive, imperfect alternatives. He is caught between the "devil he knows" in his high-maintenance Ford, a GM alternative he fears is unreliable, and a Toyota option that hurts his wallet.

We want to hear from you. 

If you were in Brian's shoes with a paid-off but problematic 2019 F-150, what would you do? Would you pay to fix the engine knock and keep the truck, bite the bullet on the higher price for a Tundra, or take a gamble on a different brand entirely?

Click the red link below to write your comment. We read and appreciate every response.

Next Up: Are you thinking of trading your older truck for a brand-new model? Before you sign the papers, you need to read my latest report: Is the 2025 Ford F-150 10-Speed Transmission Finally Fixed? Owners Say No.

With over 30 years of industry experience, Denis Flierl brings an insider’s perspective to Torque News, where he has been a Senior Reporter since 2012. Before picking up the pen, Denis consulted for the automotive industry's biggest brands and honed his skills as a test driver. He cuts through the noise to deliver the latest auto news, compelling owner stories, and the expert analysis necessary to navigate today's automotive landscape.

Have a tip or question? Follow me on X @DenisFlierl and @WorldsCoolestRides, or connect with me on Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn.

Photo credit: Denis Flierl

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Comments

Don Coleman (not verified)    December 8, 2025 - 6:11PM

I have a 2018 F-150 4x4, bought new. I feel his pain. I also have a 1989 F 150 4x4,I paid 1000. Bucks for. I put 385,000 miles on it before a frame up rebuild. Before I put any more Big money in the 2018, or buy another over priced POS I will buy a used one.

Tony (not verified)    December 8, 2025 - 7:56PM

I would wait another three years before I would buy a new full size pickup , hopefully by then they have fixed most of the problems , my 8 year old ford is fine until then !


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FireZingr (not verified)    December 8, 2025 - 10:47PM

I have a 2018 F-150 3.5L 101,000 miles and bought a lifetime power train warranty so far have had Cam Phasers replaced at 95,000 Valve Cover replaced and a oil leaking Turbo repaired total out of pocket around $400.00 I’ll be keeping my Ford until it dies.

TJ (not verified)    December 8, 2025 - 11:55PM

Buy a 5.0 Ford, like he should have in the first place. The Ford 10 SPD issues were early and not an issue anymore.

Steve (not verified)    December 9, 2025 - 10:36AM

Tesla CyberTruck. It has some issues. Mostly aesthetic. No transmission, no engine problems. As long as you aren't doing stupid stuff it is very durable. No recommended for extremely cold weather.

Roy (not verified)    December 10, 2025 - 6:32AM

I've been disappointed with the build quality on a 2018 F150 3.5L Ecoboost. Had to replace the catalytic converter before 50k miles, several plastic parks including the horn (which meant having to calibrate the airbag), water leaking inside the cabin, and other issues that shouldn't be happening on this truck. Build quality has definitely decreased.

Roy Bunch (not verified)    December 11, 2025 - 1:36AM

I have a 2020 F-150 w/3.5 turbo engine
Engine and a ten speed transmission, at 116,000 miles my camphasers were going down and the transmission was not even pulling some times, yet I am still running on the original tires with 5/32 of thread!!!
Sad when rubber outlasts the motor and transmission
So $12,000 for repairs that should be recalled by Ford. As this article is about 1 of thousands that I have seen in the last 30 days. I have Ford trucks from 1955-64-78-79-71-87-04(6.0dsl) yes I had to bullitt proof it) yet I did not pay $50k
For it either
I am still a Ford fan but when you have a problem with a product I believe Mr Ford, customer loyalty demands that you honor the trust and respect enough to step up and make it right. Fix the problem, I am not looking for a free ride. I am looking for a solution with a fixed transmission and engine, and yes you, MR FORD SHOULD OPEN UP YOUR WALLET AND BEAR THE BURDEN. A man who is busting his back and balls to pay the mortgage, feed the family and pay for their education put aside for their retirement should not have to pay for a new $ 50,000 truck twice in 3-5 years
Come on Mr Ford.these are the people that built this company all these years, Don’t forget who you are working for!!!

Do better (not verified)    December 11, 2025 - 1:41AM

Not sure what he's trying to get at. Everybody knows the 3.5 twin turbo has turbo and cam phaser issues and has for a long time. At this point, pick your poison since every brand has been having major issues. Even the new Tacoma has a recall for engine failures. Funny enough, I have a 2016 F-150 with the 2.7 twin turbo with over 400,000 miles on it and still runs like new. I keep maintenance on time every time. Can't stand people who say stupid stuff like "I'm done with Ford, Chevy and blah blah blah". You're going to run into issues eventually with every brand. GM has the 6.2l issue all over again, and RAM is having trucks in the shop for failures in large numbers per week. Quality is at an all time low and people should already know this. Chances are he'll buy another brand of truck and go online and see how he's done with that brand as well lol. Guarantee you he doesn't keep up with maintenance like he says.

MJ (not verified)    December 11, 2025 - 3:55AM

He's not going to go wrong with a Toyota because he takes care of his vehicles. My Toyota has 222,485 miles, all on the original radiator, alternator, trans, motor.
All I've ever changed on it is the battery and serpentine belt. How can you beat reliability like that?

Jesse Gentry (not verified)    December 11, 2025 - 10:38AM

I have a 2018 f150 5.0l 4x4 stx with125,xxx miles. I have been loyal to ford vehicles for 40 years the older fords I have are great not so much for the 2018 luckily so far the transmission hasn't failed (keeping my fingers crossed), replaced the vct solenoids at 85,000, water pump at 119,000, some electrical gremlins are starting to pop up occasionally, it will backfire on start up sometimes I believe that is the cam phasers going bad, it drinks oil like an out of control alcoholic (2 to 5 quarts in a 5000 mile change cycle full synthetic) I've tried different brands (ford, mobile 1, pennzoil) with no change (5w20, 5w30) 30 uses a little bit less the harder you run it the more it uses (pulling a light weight bass boat around) it will use between 3 and 5 quarts the more interstate driving the more it uses. The motor is very noisy also sounds like a deisel. I'm done with Ford and basically all the modern vehicles I'm going to keep patching up my older trucks as long as I can get parts. I've had great reliability with the older fords but they have turned there vehicles into throw away vehicles just like foreign automakers they are good to a certain point then it cost more to repair them ( if you can) than they are worth. Ford is completely out of touch with its faithful customer base!!!!!

Doug Becerra (not verified)    December 11, 2025 - 4:42PM

I have owned seven ford trucks over the past thirty years. Five of them had significant transmission problems that required major repair or replacement, and let's not forget about the coil packs. A known problem for ford, who puts the cost on the customer. I had a 2018 F-150, i had to replace the transmission out of pocket was over nine thousand dollars. Even after the replacement that truck still ran like garbage. After all, the disappointment over the years, I took that truck and traded it for a 2025 silverado trail, boss and I have not looked back.

Dave (not verified)    December 11, 2025 - 8:46PM

Have been a GM guy all my life and never had problems with older trucks until I bought a '14 Silverado, beautiful truck with lots of electrical issues as it turned out. I did luck out with no lifter issues or trans issues but the electrical issues got to be to much. 4 batteries in 3 years and truck would just completely dead at times and the magically come back to life. In a Ram now and yea I know they gave issues too but knock on wood at 95k miles and it's been a great truck!

Alan (not verified)    December 11, 2025 - 11:43PM

Its not just the Ecoboost. I have a 23 F350 and I chose it because it had the Godzilla 7.3 gas engine. Old school push rod that's what I wanted. At 20,000 mi two banks on one side were misfiring.
Metal shavings from the rollers, an issue that was supposed to be resolved by 22, happened where metal chips, not enough to show in the oil filter or the oil pan but enough to cling onto the rings and score the cylinders.
At 20,000 miles Ford put a new engine 3 weeks ago. I put 75 mi on it. It started misfiring & the check engine light went on, again.
I drove it straight to Ford. They scanned it on the spot. The fourth and 7th bank on the opposite of the engine this time around, are misfiring.
I was supposed to have an answer on Monday as they sent all the information & data & inside pictures to the engineers at Ford corporate.
So I was supposed to have an answer this past Monday and still none so I'm going to call them tomorrow & find out what the story is.
They gave me a 25 F-150 XLT with a power boost engine as a loaner. Not happy, but was better than the F-150 super cab XL they first gave me for 2 days.
Meanwhile, my $86K MSRP lariat ultimate Tremor, is sitting at the dealer for a week and a half now & I've been doubling my payments at $2,300 a month, just so I can finish paying it off in 14 months from now.
I'm guessing this is the same problem as strange as it is because it's a completely different engine part number, and they supposedly fixed that problem with the lifters and camshaft delamination.
I'm wondering if they're going to be putting a third engine in it now? I don't want them tearing this engine down unless they do put the Crane cam and lifters in & keep that warranty intact. I still have a year warranty left on the factory bumper to bumper and then I have the 7-year/hundred k gold warranty that kicks in after that. That's what sold me on this truck to begin with.
But the only reason I bought this reluctantly because I had to sell my '03 F-150 that was trouble free with only a hundred k miles on it 5.4 but I couldn't tow the 11,000 lb 36 ft grand design fifth wheel we traded our other camper for and I didn't want the diesel because when they go, I can't afford a head job let alone a new engine once the warranties up.
So the problems aren't just with the EcoBoost. And I done my research so I thought on probably 100 YouTube videos of everyone raving about the Godzilla 7.3 and that the problems that did exist were only on the 19 to late 21 models, as they supposedly fixed the problem!
I went with the 23 because of the new body style the bigger 12-in information screen and a lot of other features and didn't care for the outside looks and inside aesthetics of GMC model 3500 at all. Nor did I want a Duramax.
I wish I could just tell them to contact Crane and put a crane cam and lifters in, then send it and that would solve the problem because who's ever doing the heat treating, don't know what the hell they're doing!

Realist (not verified)    December 12, 2025 - 1:00PM

Trading displacement away means expect a short mileage lasting vehicle. These boosted, turbo'd smaller displacement power plants are NEVER going to get you the 200k miles the V8s do. Ford KNEW this which is why the horrible aluminum beds were added. They KNEW the EcoBoosts were weak and desperately needed to shed weight from the truck. 10 speeds added for the same reason. Dash lights run through the shifts like a Pinball Machine with a Wizard on the flippers. Need to get back to what works. Decent displacement V8s with tried and true transmissions and STOP pretending a truck should get the MPG of a Civic. Its a Truck stupid

Chris Christie… (not verified)    December 12, 2025 - 7:00PM

I have spent about $150 total on my 2016 Toyota and that was for a brake job I did myself which isn't really a repair is more maintenance

Chris Christie… (not verified)    December 12, 2025 - 7:02PM

He said Toyota is overpriced but when you figure what he spent on the Ford more depreciation and much more in repairs the Ford cost more than the Toyota already and it has a lot less good years left

jerry hendry (not verified)    December 12, 2025 - 7:41PM

I myself is a true fanboy of Ford from my 1992 Thunderbird, 2012 Ford F-150 4x4 3.5 liter to my 1993 Ford F-150 5.8 liter V8 4x4. I myself stick with my own vehicles no payments no high dollar insurance what I did over the years is learned how to work on my vehicle's only trouble I have with the 2012 is AC issues always besides that it is been fantastic truck and the 3.5 gosh pulls my boat and my camper with ease better than my 1993 truck plus Alot better gas mileage I say keep it fix it and do Alot of pre maitance on it like my 2012 I drain tranny oil every 75 k and motor oil changes every 4k use all synthetic oils in both replace coil paks and plugs every 15k miles wether it needs them or not cause nothing is built to last anymore that's where the owner now has to make it last.

Jeffrey Nohre (not verified)    December 12, 2025 - 9:31PM

Ram trucks are a good choice. The hemis are reliable, the 8-speed ZF transmission is the finest transmission available today, and the interiors on the newer Rams puts Ford and Chevy and Toyota to shame. Just bought a new 2025 Ram 3500 diesel, got 24mpg today on a level road at 58mph.

Randy J (not verified)    December 13, 2025 - 10:15AM

I just re ently traded in my 2019 F150 platinum on a 2019 F250 powerstroke, the cam phasers were about to go the transmission as well shifting hard so i was very fearful of what was waiting for me, with 109,000 miles this shouldn't happen, now i am back in a powerstoke with the good ole 6 speed have had no issues and this truck gets better fuel mileage, so my advice is don't give up on ford just change it up a little to a good solid truck and actually my new super duty actually ride pretty nic.

Jack (not verified)    December 13, 2025 - 11:12AM

Search the used car lots for a good 2017 GMC. I bought new and mine hasn't been in the shop yet. GMCs next gen trucks are junk.

TomDirt (not verified)    December 13, 2025 - 11:19AM

My 2012 3.5 has the 1st Gen ecoboost motor. At 178XXX miles, it needs a new timing chain. But to keep it; add new cam phasers, oil pump, etc, raising the parts cost to $2K. Labor would be another $2K. Still, compared to $70K out the door for a new 4WD crewcab? Nope. I'll repair this myself and drive it until it explodes.

Randy J (not verified)    December 13, 2025 - 2:06PM

I just re ently traded in my 2019 F150 platinum on a 2019 F250 powerstroke, the cam phasers were about to go the transmission as well shifting hard so i was very fearful of what was waiting for me, with 109,000 miles this shouldn't happen, now i am back in a powerstoke with the good ole 6 speed have had no issues and this truck gets better fuel mileage, so my advice is don't give up on ford just change it up a little to a good solid truck and actually my new super duty actually ride pretty nic.

Alan (not verified)    December 13, 2025 - 4:16PM

I've had many F150's without those problems. Maybe he didn't maintain it as good as he says or ran it very hard! Who knows. People will say anything. I now have a 2024 Ford F150 Lariat and I love it! It's solid and very very well built!

Richard (not verified)    December 14, 2025 - 1:52PM

If you’re otherwise happy with the little V6, fix it. If not, get something else. The smart move financially is to repair it, but I couldn’t justify spending money fixing a truck with a six or gasp, a four cylinder.