Why Ford BA & BF Falcon Ignition Switches Fail (And How to Fix It Permanently)
For many years going back as far as the late 1960’s Ford has used the same design for their ignition switches. Albeit with minor differences in the quality of materials used for casting the main housing of the switch.
The Difference Between Factory Cast and Billet Aluminium

The housing on the left is the billet aluminium housing CNC made by engineers in Melbourne and the one on the right is the factory cast housing used by Ford. Over the years Ford & BOSCH who made the ignition switch and sent to Ford to assemble into the steering column at the factory has used a slightly differed in the casting material used which can physically be noticed when squeezing the metal and working with it.
In the image above, you can see the difference. On the left is our CNC-machined billet aluminium housing made right here in Melbourne. On the right is the original factory-cast housing. Over time, the factory metal becomes brittle—much like sandstone—and eventually crumbles under the pressure of the internal return spring.

Unfortunately the cast material deteriorates much like sand stone over the years in which the spring that returns the key after starting chips away at the metal pieces its attached to. The spring pictured inside the white plastic part will either break off the metal tab or twist the whole part putting pressure on the wiring loom attached to it forcing it to fall apart. Again the cast metal material isn’t strong enough to hold the switch together whilst the internals are twisting once the spring has worn away on the switch housing.
Failure Rates
The failure rate is very unpredictable as to when the ignition switch will fail but we can assure the failure rate is 100% and it will eventually happen. We’ve worked on vehicles with 60,000km and others with 600,000km+. There seems to be no correlation between the condition of the ignition switch and the functionality of the key and barrel mechanism since the ignition switch is a spring loaded system floating on ball bearings. It ultimately depends on how the spring chips away and twists inside the switch year after year.
Most Common Ignition Switch Failures
Summer time seems to be the biggest trigger for failure with a large percentage falling apart mostly due to the grease melting inside the switch and lubricating the edges allowing for the wiring loom to wriggle loose. Metal will also expand and contract under extreme heat, some days I’ve actually had burn marks on my arm from touching a scolding hot steering column in the midst of summer. There will often be no indication something is wrong when you jump in the car, we have many customers arrive at the shops etc. come back to their car and its fallen apart without warning.
If you are fortunate enough that the spring return stops working and doesn’t return to the accessories position after starting then do yourself a favour and get it fixed as soon as possible. It could be anywhere from days or years away before it falls apart but when it does you’ll be stuck unable to turn off or turn on the car. We know from experience but without physically looking at it then its a complete gamble on how long it will last.
Usually by this stage the switch has failed in multiple ways, already half fallen apart and the spring return tab well worn. It’s just a matter of which one will fail first and how long until it completely falls apart.
The Warning Sign: Failed Spring Return
If your key no longer ‘springs back’ to the accessories position after you start the car, you are on borrowed time. This is the first sign that the metal tabs inside the housing have snapped. It might last days, or it might last months, but eventually, the switch will collapse, leaving you unable to turn the car on—or off.
More Information
Check out our post for some trouble shooting tips Ford Falcon & Territory Starting Problems: 7 Things to Check Before Calling a Mechanic or about Second-Hand Ford Falcon & Territory Steering Columns: Why They Are a Risky Gamble
Don’t Tow It – Fix It Onsite
Replacing a steering column is expensive and often unnecessary. We specialise in rebuilding the ignition switch using the high-quality CNC billet aluminium housings shown above.
- No new keys needed (Keep your originals)
- No towing required (We come to your home or work)
- Lifetime Guarantee On the New Ignition Switch Housing (Better than factory cast metal)
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