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Parts for your 2011 Ford Falcon-Oil seals
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2011 Ford Falcon oil seals — what they do and when to sort them
Technical sources confirm oil seals are absolutely used on the 2011 Ford Falcon. The Ford FG Falcon Workshop Manual (2008–2014) lists the front crankshaft oil seal and the rear crankshaft oil seal in Engine section 303-01, plus valve stem seals in top-end service procedures. The Ford Australia parts catalogue (Microcat/EPC) shows additional seals such as differential pinion oil seals and transmission input/output shaft seals. ZF 6HP26/6HP21 service information (used on many FG autos) also specifies multiple shaft oil seals. So yes—oil seals are relevant, common, and vital on the 2011 Falcon.
On a 2011 Falcon, oil seals keep engine and driveline fluids where they should be: inside. The big ones to know are the front crank seal (behind the harmonic balancer) and the rear main seal (between engine and gearbox). There are also cam/valve stem seals, timing cover and sump sealing interfaces, plus transmission and diff shaft seals. When they’re healthy, the engine runs cleaner, the driveway stays dry, and the oil level holds steady—too easy.
As part of routine servicing, it’s smart to give common leak points a quick look. Under the bonnet, check around the front of the engine for misting near the balancer and accessories. Down the back, look for oil tracking between the bellhousing and sump. Under the car, keep an eye on the transmission pan area, output shaft, and the diff nose.
- Watch for symptoms: fresh oil spots, burning oil smell on warm-up, oily belts, or a drip at the bellhousing.
- Maintain crankcase ventilation: a tired PCV system can build pressure and push oil past seals.
- Use quality oil and stick to service intervals—old, diluted oil is tough on seals.
- When replacing, use the correct installer tools, clean surfaces, and follow torque/spec procedures from the workshop manual.
Rear main seal jobs are more involved because the gearbox needs to come out