Enrique Villalobos
Active Member
Did they find the noise or did you pin point it for them?
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let us know what they do for that!Truck is in the dealer and they said the play in driveshaft is not normal. They plan on keeping the truck for a few days. Let’s see what they say! Fingers crossed
That was my argument to the Ford customer care person that is escalating for me. The reality is if fox is that far behind and is starting to learn that they provided defective parts, it may start to impact production or make Ford switch to another shock manufacturer. I also don’t think Ford is going to forgo selling a 80k truck because it needs to give its shocks to a truck they already sold. Unfortunately their legal department will determine that it is better for them to knowingly sell a defective truck and collect new revenue and deal with the cases that come later.
It’s just business and I get it. I just don’t like it.
Sounds like a lemon law situation to me.
The stated justification is also absurd. If Fox can provide shocks for new production, they can also provide shocks for warranty repairs. At the cost of reducing the new production rate, if necessary.
I was backing up yesterday and I got a warning about reverse brake assist not activated or something like that. It has popped up a couple of times for me randomly. Is this what your situation is with it?Dropping mine off 12/9 to diagnose and also fix Reverse Brake Assist fault.
Ordering 2022 F250 in case the clunk fix is long term wait or they say it’s normal.
Here are the facts:These posts are entirely speculation. For all we know Ford/Fox has identified the issue in production and trucks currently being built don’t exhibit the issue. Or Fox may be in process of determining root cause/course of action and Ford is installing current stock to keep the line going. And no, they’re not going to switch manufacturers on a product that is integral to the vehicles performance and design. Regardless, every supplier is backed up due to everything from labor to chip shortages.
If any manufacturer stopped the production line to allocate parts for sold vehicles for a simple noise complaint, they’d be out of business tomorrow. This isn’t a safety or emissions compliance issue, it’s an annoyance.
Just because the shocks, or what is believed to be the shocks, exhibit a noise does not mean they are necessary “defective”. It could as simple as an issue within the live valve calibration causing the noise at the top of travel. We don’t know at this point. The best course of action is to document it with your dealer. Ford will then be made aware via warranty claims (whether parts installed or NPF) and contacts to the hotline. Those metrics are a huge driver in getting engineering to open an investigation, determine root cause, and provide a corrective action.
This is the right way to track it...To those that have identified this issue when was your truck production date and date you received your truck? We should start tracking if they are selling known defective trucks.