Badgertits
FRF Addict
Dealership relationships matter 100%.
I understand OEM legal policies quite well. I‘m an engineer, but do not work for Ford.
When I off-road (hunt, fish, goof around)—it is in one of our beater Jeeps, UTVs, dirt bikes. That way if/when it breaks, gets bashed, dented—affordable and no tears.
I do not off-road fancy new factory vehicles under warranty—unless I am willing to pay the cost of repair for—if/when something (in the drivetrain usually) fails. If I take that chance, no guarantees.
With a factory warranty (including factory drivetrain warranty 5yr/60k miles):
—If you hit a curb with a Raptor, your warranty may not apply.
—If you go off-road with a Raptor, there is nothing in the legal OEM contract that says you will be covered when/if something breaks.
—I am not talking about Moss-Magnuson, etc.
OEMs are 100% within their right to deny any claim for damage occurring to a vehicle driven off-road.
NOTE 1: My OEM experience shapes my bias. Off-road your Raptor, etc., and have fun! If something breaks—it is not guaranteed that an OEM has to fix it.
NOTE 2: I maintain every vehicle our family owns (those under warranty) at factory dealerships—and do not modify anything. After warranty is over, I have at it.
NOTE 3: Only you can decide if hiring an attorney is worthwhile from a cost/benefit standpoint.
Usually I'm one of the first to say "if you wanna play you gotta pay" or to point out people shouldn't be surprised if/when they have warranty issues when adding certain mods to these trucks - leveling springs, huge FMICs, 37"s, CAI's, turbo adapters, dual catch cans that require cutting/drilling, etc. - Stuff that is going to draw a dealer's attention & in many cases doesn't even add much performance or like in the case of the FMIC where a suitable heavier duty replacement can be installed in the proper factory location or w/ a CAI where it doesn't even add any performance only potential headaches - probably worth avoiding when you weigh "risk vs reward"
All that being said - it aint like this is a damn FX4 F150 or a Ram Rebel - its a Raptor w/ long travel suspension, the most powerful/torquey performance engine ever dropped into a 4x4 1/2 ton (until very recently), a unique to the Raptor only TC that allows for AWD, beadlock capable wheels from the factory, multiple terrain modes that literally DO NOT FUNCTION & WOULD DESTROY your truck if you were to enable them on pavement, a locking rear diff, & the tallest/widest most aggressive tires every fitted to a 1/2 ton until of course Ram blessed us all w/ an even more ridiculous offering in the TRX - the ONLY trucks out there ever made from the factory to be built w/ this kinda suspension & even advertised that they can jump - hell even have it worked into the trucks ECM/TCM to accommodate momentary flights through the air w/o damage!!!
Just like if you were to purchase a Z06 vette, a Mclaren, a Ferrari, a Viper ACR, ZL1 camaro etc. - LEGIT track ready high performance vehicles - the manufacturer often offers a 1-2 day "course" on a track or in the case of the Raptor - on an offroad Moab course - to really explore the vehicles true performance capanbilities & become familiar with it
Everyone is entitled to their opinion - but in a court of law I think it'd be a pretty damn hard sell to convince a jury that Ford wasn't anticipating that people would take this truck offroad or that they didn't specifically market it for that & encourage it......
So I don't think simply taking the thing offroad in stock form should be automatic grounds for warranty denial by any means