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Parts for your 2015 Ford Kuga-Oil pump

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2015 Ford Kuga oil pump: purpose, servicing and replacement tips

Yes, the 2015 Ford Kuga absolutely uses an engine oil pump. Technical references including the Ford Kuga 2013–2018 Workshop Manual (Section 303-01: Engine — Lubrication), Ford ETIS/Service Information, and the Ford parts catalogue (Group 6600 — Oil Pump) all specify an engine-mounted, crank-driven gerotor pump across the 1.5/1.6/2.0 EcoBoost petrol and 2.0 TDCi diesel variants. Industry guides such as Autodata and Haynes also list oil pressure specs and service procedures that rely on the presence of this pump.

The oil pump’s job is simple but critical: it pushes the right volume of oil around the engine so bearings, cams and turbochargers stay lubricated and cool. On the Kuga, the pump draws oil through a pickup in the sump, regulates pressure with an internal relief valve, and feeds galleries throughout the block and head. If pressure drops, everything from cam timing to turbo life can suffer.

As a rule, the pump isn’t a routine replacement item. Look after it by keeping fresh, correct-spec engine oil and a quality filter in the car, sticking to time-and-distance intervals for Aussie and Kiwi conditions. Always use the viscosity and Ford WSS specification shown in the owner’s handbook for the exact engine, and don’t stretch changes if the vehicle does lots of short trips, tows, or sees dusty work.

There are times a Kuga may need pump attention or replacement: repeated low-oil-pressure warnings, noisy cold starts, VCT rattle, turbo whine, or metallic bearing noises. Before blaming the pump, a good workshop will confirm actual pressure with a mechanical gauge, check for a clogged pickup screen, verify oil grade, and assess bearing clearances. Pumps rarely fail in isolation