The 2010 F-250 with the 6.4L Power Stroke is notorious for catastrophic engine failures stemming from emissions system defects and fuel system contamination issues. This is arguably Ford's most problematic diesel generation, with many requiring complete engine rebuilds or replacements well before 200,000 miles.
6.4L Power Stroke Catastrophic Engine Failure
Common · high severityTypical onset: 80,000-150,000 mi
Symptoms: white smoke on startup, fuel dilution in oil (oil level rising), loss of power, knocking or rattling from bottom end, metal shavings in oil, sudden seizure
Fix: The 6.4L suffers from cracked pistons, spun rod bearings, and failed EGR coolers that dump coolant into cylinders. Most require complete engine rebuild (80-100 hours) or replacement with reman long block (40-50 hours). Root causes include DPF regeneration cycles dumping raw fuel into oil, diluting lubrication and starving bearings. Many shops now recommend bulletproof kits during rebuild or immediate trade-out of vehicle.
Estimated cost: $15,000-25,000
EGR Cooler Failure and Coolant Contamination
Common · high severityTypical onset: 60,000-120,000 mi
Symptoms: white exhaust smoke, coolant loss with no external leaks, overheating, rough running, milky oil, steam from exhaust
Fix: The EGR cooler cracks internally, allowing coolant into the intake and cylinders, causing hydrolock or rapid corrosion. If caught early (8-12 hours labor for cooler replacement), you might save the engine. If coolant enters cylinders under load, expect bent rods and cracked pistons requiring full engine work. Ford issued TSB 10-17-6 but no recall. Many delete EGR systems where legal.
Estimated cost: $2,500-4,000
Diesel Particulate Filter (DPF) Clogging and Regeneration Issues
Common · medium severityTypical onset: 40,000-100,000 mi
Symptoms: frequent 'service DPF' warnings, loss of power in limp mode, excessive fuel consumption, long regeneration cycles, strong diesel smell during regen, check engine light
Fix: The DPF clogs prematurely, especially with short trips or city driving. Forced regeneration (1-2 hours) may clear it temporarily, but most need DPF replacement (6-8 hours). The real problem: regeneration injects raw fuel post-combustion to burn soot, which washes past rings and dilutes oil, accelerating the bearing and piston failures above. This is a design flaw, not serviceable fix.
Estimated cost: $1,500-3,500
Turbocharger Failure (Sequential Twin Turbos)
Occasional · high severityTypical onset: 100,000-180,000 mi
Symptoms: blue or black smoke, whistling or grinding noise, oil leaking from turbo, no boost pressure, oil in intercooler boots, sudden power loss
Fix: The compound turbo setup (low and high pressure) fails from oil starvation caused by fuel dilution issues or seized VGT mechanisms from carbon buildup. Replacement requires both turbos typically (12-16 hours labor). If turbo grenades, expect metal debris throughout intake system requiring intercooler and piping replacement. Always change oil religiously and check for play at purchase.
Estimated cost: $3,500-6,000
Transmission Oil Cooler Line Failure
Common · high severityTypical onset: any mileage
Symptoms: transmission slipping, pink or milky transmission fluid, coolant in transmission, transmission overheating, no reverse or erratic shifting, coolant loss
Fix: The factory oil cooler inside the radiator fails, allowing coolant and transmission fluid to mix (the 'strawberry milkshake of death'). This destroys the 5R110W transmission within miles if not caught immediately. Repair requires transmission rebuild or replacement (18-24 hours), new radiator, cooler lines, and complete fluid flush of entire cooling system (30-40 hours total). Always bypass factory cooler with external aftermarket unit as prevention.
Estimated cost: $4,500-8,000
High-Pressure Fuel Pump Failure
Occasional · high severityTypical onset: 70,000-140,000 mi
Symptoms: hard starting, rough idle, loss of power, fuel in oil (dilution), metal shavings in fuel filter, no start condition, check engine light with fuel pressure codes
Fix: The CP4 high-pressure fuel pump fails catastrophically, sending metal debris throughout the entire fuel system. Requires HPFP replacement, all eight injectors, fuel rails, lines, tank cleaning, and sometimes lift pump (25-35 hours). Contaminated fuel from bad stations accelerates failure. Some install aftermarket fuel filtration and CP3 pump conversions. Check fuel filters for metal at every service.
Estimated cost: $8,000-12,000
Radiator and Cooling System Failures
Occasional · medium severityTypical onset: 80,000-150,000 mi
Symptoms: coolant leaks from seams, overheating under load, cracked plastic tanks, weeping from core, pressure loss, white residue on radiator
Fix: Plastic radiator end tanks crack from thermal cycling and high coolant temperatures generated by DPF regeneration. Replacement is straightforward (4-6 hours) but must address the internal oil cooler issue simultaneously. Always upgrade to heavy-duty aftermarket radiator with external transmission cooler. Coolant condition critical—flush every 30,000 miles minimum in these trucks.
Estimated cost: $800-1,500
Avoid unless free—the 6.4L Power Stroke is a financial liability with unavoidable catastrophic failure risks that no amount of maintenance can fully prevent. Buy a 7.3L, 6.7L, or Cummins instead.
AI-assisted summary drawn from NHTSA recall data, our labor-times database, and platform knowledge. Not a substitute for a pre-purchase inspection on a specific vehicle.