I don't care if it improves my gas mileage, lol. I shouldnt be hearing it. If they can figure a way to make it keep doing it but I can't HEAR or FEEL it, GREAT !.... Good job Ford !!
If I had a 1987 Ford F150 and it started doing it at 217,435 miles I would STILL want it fixed.
If Ford is trying to figure out a "cost effective" fix and is waiting until everyones warranty runs out, they will get sued waaaay before that, lol.
I'll pay for the immediate fix, rather than drive with it for the next year or so.
HR, I did not mean to give you the idea that you should "learn to live with it" and I apologize if I came off that way. I truly hope FoMoCo can resolve this for you and I am sure that there is a fix due to the fact that not every truck seems to experience this, unlike the ranger thing I mentioned which affected all manual trans rangers. I just meant to say that there is not any detrimental mechanical effect to your vehicle in the meantime until they hopefully resolve it.
FSM
P.S. personally I feel it has to due with u-joint angles and how they change when coming to a stop. The softer suspension allows the nose of the pinion to "droop" or lower when braking to a stop. In some instances this may allow the operating angles of the front and rear u-joint to operate above 1 to 1 1/2 degrees. The u-joints then "fight" each other until the angle returns to normal. But hey, that's just a guess based on a few years of dealing with driveline angles. Could be completely out in left field.