FusionDad
Fusion Energi Member-
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I am the original poster. I bought spacers on E-Bay and on Amazon until I hit the right thickness. Trial and error. The spacer lug hole pattern must match the Fusion's lug pattern... if I remember correctly, 5 x 108mm. For all - I sold my Fusion Energi and kept my Fusion donut wheel and spacer. Anyone out there wants it, PM me pls.
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Folks, Having had two blowouts on the highway with my Energi, I focused and finally cracked the nut on how to use an OEMFord Fusion donut wheel and not be stuck on the highway anymore. Description of my solution follows, as well as an offer to anyone also trying to solve this problem. Solution: add a hub-centric spaces with integral wheel studs, as well as a 3mm press-fit spacer. HOW: one hub-centric spacer + one 3mm generic flat spacer. This combination of spacers makes the inside of the OEM Fusion donut clear the extra-large Energi REAR WHEEL calipers while preserving the recommended wheel bolt thread depths for safe use. IMPLEMENTATION: 1. ALWAYS put the donut on the rear wheel, no matter where the blown tire is... keep reading. 2. remove the blown wheel (if a blowout is on the rear wheel) or a good rear wheel (to replace the blown front wheel). 3. put on the generic 3mm spacer (this prevents the OEM wheel bolts from protruding through the hub-centric spacer and bottoming out inside the donut wheel). 4. bolt on the hub-centric spacer using its half-height lugs on the OEM wheel bolts inside the recessed machined spaces. 5. bolt on the OEM Fusion donut wheel onto the hub-centric spacer's wheel bolts, using the OEM wheel lugs. 6. (optional) swap the damaged front wheel with the good rear wheel you just took off. GOOD DEAL: I have the spacers bolted to my Fusion donut for travel storage. Both the hub-centric spacers and the press-fit thin spacers came in pairs... so I have an extra set of the wide hub-centric spacer with its additional bolts and half-height lugs, and the generic 3mm spacer. If you need this solution, PM me... all you need other than these two spacers is a normal OEM Fusion donut (I got a brand new one off E-Bay for $68) and a Ford Fusion jack and of course a lug tool. I recommend a Billy Club by PowerBuilt which will fit any car's bolt lugs. Hope this is useful for someone out there.
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jsamp reacted to a post in a topic: Boosting performance (speed, cornering) on my Fusion??!
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jj2me reacted to a post in a topic: Boosting performance (speed, cornering) on my Fusion??!
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Boosting performance (speed, cornering) on my Fusion??!
FusionDad replied to labelboy68's topic in Lounge - Fusion Energi
...also, try replacing the brake lines with STEEDA stainless steel brake lines. If you're mechanically handy this is a DIY and the new lines give significantly more precision "feel" to braking. Yet another tip: once his OEM LRR tires wore out my son put Michelin Defenders on his Energi, and THAT certainly made a notable positive difference both in comfort and in handling, while the Defenders have a 90,000 mile life to boot as a very nice bonus. -
Boosting performance (speed, cornering) on my Fusion??!
FusionDad replied to labelboy68's topic in Lounge - Fusion Energi
Try a half-shafted Fusion Energi throttle body from Cordova Motor Sports. My son and I have them on our two Energis, and they helped... not tremendously, but a li'l. Easy bolt-on mod that'll pay back for the life of the car. Best! -
gazza1129 reacted to a post in a topic: Overall Expected Long Term Battery Life
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Jake reacted to a post in a topic: Anyone bought Tire chains for mountain driving ?
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We've been charging our 2012 Prius Plug-In and our Ford Fusion Energi out on the driveway since April 2012. Never a problem, rain, snow or shine. Of course, the 120V receptacle has an in-use waterproof Lexan cover with holes for the charge cord out the bottom. Our Level 2 Leviton 16 amp charger is mounted outside as well. I fashioned a PVC pipe holster on a nearby porch swing set to hold the level 2 charging connector in a connection-down position when it's not used.
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mmmhmmmm reacted to a post in a topic: NEW Possible Seat height fix for Fusion 2013 (maybe 2014?)
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Getting the fever...any downsides to Fusion Energi?
FusionDad replied to willsyaya57's topic in Welcome
Mileage (and "EV mileage") will greatly increase in warm months and drop in the colder months. It's a function of battery physics. However, no matter what, you'll still get ridiculously good mileage compared to most drivers on the road. I suggest you plan your drive, no matter what the length, so that you get back home with the traction battery empty, since electric power is cheaper than gasoline. Playing with the EV Now / EV Auto / EV Later buttons on the center console is the trick. You can also set the left-side dashboard display to show you what your car is using at any given moment. My son and I tend to use the "double arc" display i.e the simultaneous display that shows use of the gas engine and the EV motor display, as the most informative. Once selected, this display can teach you when and how to drive in the most gas-saving way possible. Enjoy! -
FusionDad reacted to a post in a topic: Getting the fever...any downsides to Fusion Energi?
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This is a great car. Son and I bought it together on Memorial Day weekend in 2013, took it together on a 7,000 mile cross-country trip this Summmer, and Son moved himself and all his gear from Northern Virginia to Louisville Kentucky using just the Fusion Energi, a buddy and a Thule roof box (the largest one) - gear that included his huge flat screen TV. Apart from weirdo Ford infotainment electronics, this is a fool-proof midsize car with a fantastic gas mileage, solid driving behavior, high comfort and good reliability. The more you plug in the better it gets. I strongly recommend it.
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Getting the fever...any downsides to Fusion Energi?
FusionDad replied to willsyaya57's topic in Welcome
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LARRYH, thanks for sharing your observations over the last month+. Your evidence about use of the Engine Block heater confirmed empirically what I had sensed by the seat-of-my-pants on another plug-in hybrid, our 2012 Prius Plug-In: the EBH helps the car run better, (more efficiently) beyond helping the car start easily. . Now I and Son will have to talk about getting an EBH installed onto our Fusion Energi - maybe for the next Winter. Too bad it doesn't look like a snick-snick insert-into-precast-sleeve operation like on the Prius.
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FusionDad reacted to a post in a topic: Getting the fever...any downsides to Fusion Energi?
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Rexracer reacted to a post in a topic: Getting the fever...any downsides to Fusion Energi?
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Getting the fever...any downsides to Fusion Energi?
FusionDad replied to willsyaya57's topic in Welcome
BLUF: the Fusion Energy is a great car. Battery: I've owned the 1st generation Prius, traded up to a 2d generation Prius and now own the 3d generation Prius plug-in Advanced (Li-Ion battery) and also the Fusion. These batteries last and last... ...and last. The 1st generation Priuses are just now beginning to die, with ten years on the road. Check the Pruschat blog. Plug-in hybrids versus the regular hybrids: if you own your home you can charge easily, often several times /day on the weekend. Each charge for this car gives you 22 - 25 EV miles as a cost of 50 - 80 cents per charge. Add that up over 30 days in a month, and it equates to well over 600 miles at a conservative cost of $25 or less. If you drive, say, 1,000 miles/month, you only pay gas for the last 300 miles. On long trips you still get a fabulous 43 MPG average with a good-sized, comfortable car. Trunk space: the trunk is short (shallow in depth) but quite tall (deep vertically). Last August, my son and I made a cross-country vacation trip of just about 7,000 miles, from Virginia to Yellowstone, the Black Hills, the Bonneville Salt Flats, Pikes Peak and lots of points in between. Two adults, all their 23-day trip gear, crap we bought enroute, camping gear, clothes, food cooler, whiskey bottles and we were fine. The folding rear seats work well as extra cargo space. I created a thread about that trip elsewhere on this forum. If you might travel long distances with four+ people and all their luggage, then you'll have space limitations. In my experience, up to three people with all their luggage is quite comfortable with smart packing. In mid-September, my 30-year old son moved 600 miles from Virginia to Kentucky. The moving vehicle was our Fusion and a son's friend along for the ride. All of son's stuff (except of course furniture - he had none worth moving) fit into the Fusion trunk and rear seat cargo area and and a Thule extra-large roof cargo box we invested in as it'll last for the life of the car. Yes the Thule coffin-sized box was full to the gills - but this illustrates that this car is flexible and relatively easy to live with depending on how you plan to use it. So, my advice is to buy it unless you already have an immediate family of four+ and, if that is true, also cannot afford more than one car. If you are single, it'll work for you. If there are two of you, it'll work for you. Two people and a small child - it'll work for you. -
One addition: because our 2013 Fusion now lives in Louisville KY along with my son, I actually measured the hole spacing etc. on Virginia sales yards' Fusions - and the 2013 and 2014 models I measured seem to have the same exact seat hardware, which makes sense. So, yes this should also fit the 2014 models.
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FusionDad reacted to a post in a topic: NEW Possible Seat height fix for Fusion 2013 (maybe 2014?)
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Dave et.al, Dave, thanks for posting the pix and for kindly sharing your extra bolts. We also installed these onto our Fusion and they look good and work well for the seat height, and moreover provide safety pinning between the seat rail (OEM steel pin) and the new bracket and the floor pan (the shiny steel 1/2 inch dia roll pin seen in the photo) to prevent shearing of the seat under horizontal impacts. Installation is really simple. I ordered two 2 inch x 1.5 inch aluminum billets from Grainger supply, and also a bag of five steel roll pins. The two aluminum billets were enough to make three sets of billet brackets, with a slope cut into the top of each bracket to correspond to the 17-inch rise angle (17 inches between the front and the rear seat bolts). Since I made three sets of billet brackets (three sets just in case I screwed up on cutting the 1st set) I still have one set left over. Unfortunately, with five steel pins per bag, that extra set has only one steel pin instead of two, in other words one bracket still needs a steel pin. One of the brackets also has three holes instead of two (experimental 1st bracket I drilled, of course wrong). I also have one extra set of the DAVE bolts to go with this set. If anyone out there would like this set, pls PM me and we can arrange something. MCH a.k.a FusionDad
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Question on wiring up my Clipper Creek 240V charger
FusionDad replied to Fat Fusion's topic in Batteries & Charging
I just wired a used Leviton 16 amp L2 charger last week in my son's house for the daily Fusion feed. It came with a whip and we put it on the garage wall next to the 1964 Bryant panel. Other than finding the correct Eaton breaker to match the outmoded panel, the installation was a breeze. Both black wires to the two breaker posts, and the ground wire to the ground bar... and that was that. -
FusionDad reacted to a post in a topic: Engine block heater - anyone out there have one?
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Engine block heater - anyone out there have one?
FusionDad replied to FusionDad's topic in Lounge - Fusion Energi
...BTW, yes - on the Prius, 3/4 of the job was disassembling all the panels etc and figuring out a way in through a maze of complexity. Ah,the days of a 1968 inline six were so simple!