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Parts for your 2018 Ford Escape-Exhaust gasket

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2018 Ford Escape exhaust gasket — what it is, where it fits, and when to replace

Based on Ford’s technical literature, the 2018 Ford Escape does use exhaust gaskets. The Ford Workshop Manual (2018 Escape/Kuga) sections covering Exhaust System (309-00) and Engine — 2.5L i-VCT, 1.5L and 2.0L EcoBoost (303-01) specify sealing gaskets or rings at key joints and note they’re single‑use items. The Ford Parts Catalogue for this model year also lists exhaust manifold/turbo mounting gaskets and downpipe sealing rings. Put simply, the Escape’s exhaust relies on gaskets to keep hot gases sealed, noise down, and sensors reading correctly.

The job of an exhaust gasket is to create a gas‑tight seal between mating flanges that expand and contract with heat. On the Escape, those seals stop fumes sneaking into the cabin, protect oxygen sensor data and emissions kit, and keep the turbo spooling happily on EcoBoost models. A good seal also reduces that tinny tick on cold start and prevents soot streaks around joints.

Where they sit depends on the engine. The 2.5L naturally aspirated variant uses a cylinder‑head to exhaust manifold gasket, plus gaskets or sealing rings further downstream. The 1.5L and 2.0L EcoBoost engines use gaskets at the turbo mounting and at the turbo‑to‑downpipe joint (often a crush/“donut” ring or v‑band sealing interface), along with additional seals at flanges and the flex section. Ford’s workshop procedures call for replacing these gaskets and any self‑locking nuts whenever the joint is disturbed.

Tell‑tales that an exhaust gasket is on the way out include a sharp tapping or “tss‑tss” under load, a hot exhaust smell near the firewall, visible soot around a flange, and, in some cases, fuel trim or catalyst efficiency faults from disturbed O2 readings. If any of that shows up, a fresh gasket and correct torque procedure will usually sort it.

As part of routine servicing, a quick visual check for soot tracks, loose fasteners and heat staining is smart. When replacing, stick with quality components, follow the torque sequence in the Ford WSM (centre‑out on multi‑bolt flanges, in stages), and bin old gaskets and single‑use nuts. Avoid paste upstream of the cat and O2 sensors, and don’t lubricate coated/self‑locking hardware unless the manual specifically allows it. That approach keeps the Escape quiet, compliant, and ready for the next WOF/rego.

  • Signs to watch: ticking on cold start, exhaust whiff, soot at joints, loss of boost on EcoBoost.
  • Good practice: replace gaskets whenever a joint is cracked open, use new hardware, torque to spec.

Popular questions about 2018 Ford Escape exhaust gaskets

Does the 2018 Ford Escape have a gasket at the turbo?
Yes, EcoBoost models use sealing at the turbo mounting and at the turbo‑to‑downpipe joint. Ford’s Workshop Manual specifies replacing those gaskets or sealing rings and the self‑locking nuts every time the joint is disturbed to ensure a proper seal and correct sensor readings.

Can an exhaust leak damage the catalytic converter or sensors?
Upstream leaks can let extra oxygen into the exhaust stream, skewing O2 sensor data. Over time, that can lead to mixture errors and catalyst stress. Fixing leaks quickly helps keep trims normal and protects the cat, which is far costlier than a gasket.

Is it okay to reuse an old exhaust gasket if it looks fine?
No. Ford’s procedures treat compressible exhaust gaskets and most sealing rings as single‑use. Reusing can lead to weeps that only show under heat and load. Fit a new gasket and torque to spec for a first‑time, long‑term seal.

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