To set the context, my wife had a 2016 Ford Escape which was the
easiest machine on which to change the oil that I have ever owned.
Everything is easy to reach, and clearly visible.
It wound up being totaled in a rear end collision in Dallas. At least
no one was hurt, and the other guy was at fault. We headed back to the
Ford house to get another new one, model 2017. I gave no thought at all to the
process for changing the oil after owning the 2016.
When the time came to change the oil in the 2017, I just ran it up on
the ramps and crawled under.
Whoops ! The 2017 has a fiber "shield" covering everything. It can be
removed, but requires a "torx" wrench, rather than an "allen" wrench.
I headed to town.
Grrr. No one had the wrench.
Given that we live in the hinterlands of Oklahoma (near Ada - the local philosophy is
that "if we don't have it, you don't need it"), it took a couple of days to
get a suitable torx wrench. I finally acquired one, and started over.
After removing the shield, I found out that the 2016 oil pan wrench was an "english" size,
but the 2017 is "metric". Back to town. A miracle transpired, and Home Depot actually had
one in the right size. Back to the job.
The oil actually flowed out of the pan !
The oil filter on the 2016 was easy to see and turn. It took a few minutes to actually
find the filter on the 2017. It's buried up under a maze of hoses in a different place.
At least it turned when I tugged. By now I was expecting a left handed thread or something.
On the 2016, the oil filter drops straight down and drains reasonably well. On the 2017
hot oil is guaranteed to splatter on everything in sight: hoses, oil pan, the ground, down
my arm to my elbow, and my glasses. I strongly suggest that it should be channeled instead
into the designer's underwear.
The new filter is the same as the old model, but requires a three-armed alien with
double joints on each of six fingers to turn the dang thing when it is finally aligned
in its proper place. Don't damage the hoses when you do that.
I put it all back together without incident.
On both the 2016 and 2017 there is a dashboard warning about "oil life". To reset
the oil warning on the 2016, one uses a menu entry on the "Info" system. To reset
the oil warning on the 2017, all you have to do is hold the accelerator and the
brake simultaneously to the floor while the ignition switch is turned to "accessory"
but the car is not running. Very intuitive. I actually found that in the manual
(eventually).
In short, it looks like Ford has taken something that was simple and deliberately made it
complicated, perhaps in an effort to force customers to pay exorbitant prices for
having dealers change the oil.
If the designer of this silly system was one of my freshman software design students,
I would flunk his ass on principle, just for trying to be smarter than he actually is.
I would make it stick, too.