yeah, bite the bullet and take the truck to a dealer with a good service department. You’ve got less than 1k miles on a new truck that you just shelled out scores of thousands of dollars for. Ford should do the troubleshooting and fixing, not you. Even if you’re mechanically inclined or really good with engines, there’s a more important reason.
What if it’s not a simple problem?
If you’ve changed the plugs out, the mechanic now is forced to validate or invalidate your change(s) to troubleshoot the issue.
But, let’s say you do the homework and based on some feedback you get from other Rap users you want different plugs. Dealer changes them and they warranty the work; This is cheap insurance for previous Ford truck engines with a penchant for spitting spark plugs out. Have Ford change the spark plugs, and if the plugs get shot out during the repair warranty, boom. covered. More than one Lightning owner saved a bit of money doing this.
YMMV, but I think the most correct answer here is to let Ford sort it out.
Good point and funny because I just got done telling another guy the exact same thing about another issue, let it be Ford's issue.
For the record, my stuttering is at partial throttle on acceleration, like leaving from a stop light. Once I'm at cruising speed, I don't notice it, I also don't notice if I'm more aggressive in my acceleration.