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1.3

hardly worth mentioning
Crashes / Fires:
0 / 0
Injuries / Deaths:
0 / 0
Average Mileage:
130,084 miles

About These NHTSA Complaints:

This data is from the NHTSA — the US gov't agency tasked with vehicle safety. Complaints are spread across multiple & redundant categories, & are not organized by problem.

So how do you find out what problems are occurring? For this NHTSA complaint data, the only way is to read through the comments below. Any duplicates or errors? It's not us.

2006 Ford F-150 fuel system problems

fuel system problem

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2006 Ford F-150 Owner Comments (Page 2 of 2)

« Read the previous 20 complaints

problem #3

Jan 272013

F-150 8-cyl

  • 118,000 miles

A D V E R T I S E M E N T S

Truck keeps shutting off. If you wait 45 minutes to restart it will start and idle for about 15 seconds and slowly die. Or you can drive a short distance and it will die. Repair is for the fuel pump control module. Because of where it is mounted on the truck it corrodes very fast especially in snow states due to the salt on roadways. Ford can you please do a recall of this part and reimburse us for the cost!

- Mosinee, WI, USA

problem #2

Dec 282012

F-150 8-cyl

  • 66,000 miles
2006 F-150 fuel control module should be a mandatory safety recall for Ford. The 2006 F-150 has a poorly designed fuel module that absolutely will fail over time in rust belt states, producing a loss of power, inability to start or a complete engine stall / loss of control at any speed, including highway speeds. My complaint starts after the first snowstorm this year. The truck was sluggish to accelerate on the highway and it seemed to need more gas pedal just to maintain speed. A few days later I drove up heavily salted roads to a ski area. At the end of the day, the truck would not start without the gas pedal being fully depressed. (first time I have ever had to use the gas pedal to start it.) I got it running for about 2 minutes, then it stalled out while still in park. It took several tries to restart it. I finally got it going again and it performed ok on the 60 mile home trip, some of that at interstate speeds. The next day the truck would not start at all. It would crank, but not turn over. The shop I took it to did the diagnosis and it turned out that it was not bad gas or a clogged fuel line. It was a faulty fuel control module located above the spare tire. This module is flawed not only in design but in placement as well. It is not weatherproof and not even the right type of metal to be exposed to salt, sand and water. It has dissimilar metal from the truss it mounts to, disintegrated over time and I also question Ford's supposed fix to the problem (spacers). www.youtube.com/watch?V=_2E9kmf1_kg it should be completely redesigned with years of rust belt element exposure in mind. You don't want to have an engine stall - ever. (I would have put it inside the cab or under the hood). Why is this not more important than a flawed headlamp?

- Burlington, VT, USA

problem #1

Nov 062012

F-150 8-cyl

  • 107,001 miles
I was driving towards work when all the sudden the truck died. After safely pulling on the side of the road. The truck did not start at all. According to my family mechanic, it was the fuel pump. I paid 540 for the fix including the part from the Ford dealership. A few days later, the truck did not start on the morning going to work. My family mechanic came and did a few test and found out it was the fuel pump module. He then replaced such module. The module was rusted and it was falling apart. After he replace it with a new one, the truck started and is working properly. He charged me 300 including the part from the dealer.

- Rosemount, MN, USA

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