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Parts for your 2005 Ford Falcon-Manifold gasket

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2005 Ford Falcon manifold-gasket: what it does and how to look after it

Yes, a manifold-gasket is absolutely used on the 2005 Ford Falcon. Both the Barra 4.0 inline-six (including XR6 Turbo) and the Boss 5.4 V8 rely on intake and exhaust manifold gaskets. This is documented in the Ford BA/BF Falcon Workshop Manual (Section 303-01 Engine—Intake Manifold and Exhaust Manifold procedures) and supported by common Australian service references like Gregory’s/Ellery’s manuals. Turbo variants also use additional gaskets at the turbo/manifold and turbine outlet joints.

The manifold-gasket’s job is simple but critical. On the intake side, it seals the manifold to the cylinder head so only metered air enters the engine—no vacuum leaks, no rough idle, and proper fuel trims. On the exhaust side it keeps hot gases inside the runners so the oxygen sensors read cleanly, the cabin stays fume-free, and the turbo (if fitted) spools properly. A healthy gasket helps protect engine efficiency, performance and emissions, while also preventing that annoying tick on cold start.

Because Falcons rack up plenty of kilometres and see lots of heat cycles, manifold-gaskets can harden, shrink, or the mating surfaces can distort. Whenever a manifold is removed—say for a timing chain service, turbo work, or to chase a misfire—best practice is to fit new gaskets. They’re inexpensive insurance against repeat labour.

  • Tell-tales of a failing intake manifold-gasket: hunting idle, lean codes, hiss under the bonnet, or a change in short/long-term fuel trims. A smoke test makes diagnosis easy.
  • Exhaust manifold-gasket clues: ticking on cold start that fades warm, soot marks at the flange, exhaust smell near the firewall, or lazy turbo response on XR6T.
  • Replacement tips: clean and degrease mating faces, check manifold flatness, use the correct gasket material (MLS/graphite per engine), follow the factory torque values and sequence, and replace heat-shield hardware. Avoid sealant unless the manual specifies it.
  • On XR6 Turbo: renew the turbo-to-manifold and outlet gaskets, and consider new studs/nuts. Heat-cycled hardware can stretch or seize.

As part of regular servicing, inspect for leaks, recheck fastener condition, and keep an eye on hoses and the throttle body gasket at the same time. Done right, a fresh manifold-gasket keeps the Falcon running sweet with no dramas.

Popular questions about 2005 Ford Falcon manifold-gaskets

How often should the manifold-gasket be replaced?
There’s no fixed kilometre interval in the factory guidance