I’ve found that motorcraft batteries are cheaper the. Any of the parts store brands.
I’ve got one that’s over 7 years old.
I think that's luck of the draw, and possibly dependent on the type of Motorcraft battery. The one in dad's 21 F-150 is an AGM and appears to need replacement. He'sbeen fussing about the fordpass and courtesy lights not working for weeks/months. I finally looked into it today and it appears that the truck's battery management system is going into battery saver mode due to low battery voltage.
Seems like normal reports concerning AGMs is that they last longer than FLA batteries, but this one appears to be gone at three years. In my research it appears that a lot of them have gone out sooner and it is common for techs to pull a new battery off the shelf and find it bad. That said, they do have FoMoCo written on top, not Motorcraft, so maybe a different supplier?
He's going to pick up a new Everstart from Walmart in the next day to three. They ain't high dollar, but reviews seem good, they have a 4 year free replacement warranty, and Walmarts are everywhere. He's going to find one of his older full dead batteries to turn in for a core. We might see if the original can be revived, and if not it'll still be good enough for running various 12v stuff we have around.
I would think the “balloon“ tires would take up a lot of the lateral forces on the wheels, spacers and bearings. Maybe not take up all the force, but certainly mellow out the high points and shock loads. I don’t think a properly installed spacer would fail from constant lateral loading, but rather an instant shock like if you hit a pothole on a curve. Yes/no?
You may have figured this out already, but lil_Blue_Ford and I are on parallel build paths, and I can assure you that balloon tires are not in the plans. Some of the stock suspension bits won't either once we can find/make replacements.
As for using the off road with balloon tires, kind of depends on what kind of offroading one will be doing. Offroading runs the gambit from borderline rock bouncing to leasurely driving on dirt roads. My concerns with a spacer off road where you may be sitting at angles which put most of the rigs weight on a single tire, then require liberal application of the skinny pedal to get over certain obstables. Or trying to drive on a hard pack dirt road like a baja racer does through the soft desert sand. (Guilty of that latter scenario myself.)
I wouldn't be as concerned in scenarios where speeds were going to be moderate and/or loads will be somewhat evenly distributed. While high speed cornering will transfer weight, it doesn't seem like it would to near the extent that offroad driving would. Plus with our trucks being AWD, the torque is going to be more distributed rather than being concentrated on a single wheel and spacer.
At least that's my thinking on the subject. I'm running spacers for now, but I intend to ditch them for aftermarket wheels down the road once I have suspension and ride height sorted.
While I can follow the logic there
@Rick W, I think the idea is to reduce the softness of the tires and move those forces to the suspension which is much easier to control with springs and shock valves.
Can't really speak for lil_Blue_Ford even though we have similar goals, but that's where I'm heading with mine. Reduced sidewalls resulting in less deflection under cornering. It will reduce the ride but intend to improve suspension to compensate for that. There's not a lot that can be done with torsion bars to improve control, but once I have ride height sorted where I want it, I intend to do a coil over conversion. I'll spend time with those companies figuring out what would be good spring and valving for my intended usage.