Great, thanks for the reply….. I’ll just go with the passenger side for now. I had one on my 2012 V6 and it never trapped anything, but I want to be safe.
Each time I look up catch cans I only see passenger side it’s hard to find a driver side. Is this because the passenger side spews more oil and driver side isn’t really needed? Please advise.
I guess the first thing would be to analyze the number of repairs needed over five years considering most trade every five years or less. Would they equal the cost of the insurance?
I looked at this on a Ford Edge I had years ago and had to replace all the wheel bearings but Ford covered it all...
It was an EPA requirement after studying the issue and trying to cut hydrocarbons.
And you’re right it’s not a filter that’s why it’s called a trap. Good for the life of the vehicle.
Illegal to remove but how would they know and what’s the fine?
Again, did you watch the video I loaded on the traps? It explains the theory. If you disagree go argue with Ford Engineers and not me. Good God give it a rest.
I think it works best on music actually on your phone. I did read on the website that it won’t work with Apple Music or Prime Music or others like that. It’s supposed to work with Spotify but I didn’t try it.
I always carry my own music and it works great with that.
I’m going to sound like Apple Support….. (I’m not)
I’ve had a multitude of issues with my iPhone 15. Every update brought more problems. In the end I ensured I had a backup of the apps and data then trashed the phone. Did a complete reinstall of the OS then a restore of the apps. After which it...
Again in IOS after I installed it on my iPhone and allowed access to my music I selected “car mode” and was sitting in my car so I brought up Carplay and there it was. I select my music using BOOM not the Apple Music app then select my playlist. Then played with the settings until I was happy.