@Owen Grady,
None of what follows is meant to pour salt on you or cause an affront.
The manufacturers warranty only requires that they repair or replace defective parts within the covered period. The law and the warranty say absolutely nothing about keeping us in vehicles. I know that’s frustrating, I’ve been successful at both a lemon lawsuit and a warranty covered engine repair on a Mustang with some bolt ons. The Mustang was down for 3 months! I ended up buying a heavily (ab)used Ford Exploder to kick around in after it became a little too cold for my tolerance on a motorcycle.
The only thing you can do is develop some patience. That is not easy when you’re in a situation like this.
You should be able to engage the regional customer service rep. if you aren’t able, have the service manager help you get them in touch.
You need to be accommodating to the dealer too. Remember, you’re one customer, they probably have 20 more they’re working with for all things from routine service to why the he** did this motor blow up and everything in between. I’m not saying that the dealer has acquitted themselves well here, just that getting spun up about it won’t drive the issue to resolution any faster.
if the truck still starts, I’d suggest this:
go to the dealer and demand the truck or a root cause. They either know what is wrong, or they don’t and if they don’t by this time, they won’t. Ever.
if they have the root cause, make them write it down, estimate the time to repair.
if they don’t have root cause, tell them to make the truck ready and document on the ticket: Unable to resolve problem, customer asked for vehicle back. Don’t accept it unless the receipt says “unable to resolve problem”. You need them to admit they have had the vehicle for nn days and
weren’t able to fix it.
THIS is what you take to Ford C/S.
Don’t leave without a receipt indicating they can’t fix it. The service writer won’t want to do this, get the service manager. “You’ve had it 2 weeks, tell me what’s wrong or cash me out and give me the receipt saying you’re not able to fix it. Not ‘unable to reproduce’ - unable to remedy/fix/address - whatever - the customer’s concern.
And yes, they will write this on a receipt, it was a nice bit of evidence in my decades ago suit.
Go to another dealer and ask them if they can handle it. Some of them are actually honest about it and some will equivocate. Be wary of equivocating.
Use this as leverage to get them to split a max length ESP with you. at cost pricing is viewable from Flood Ford online.
Remember, it’s not directly the service manager’s fault, or the service writer’s fault. They may be overbooking the mechanics, or the mech’s may simply not know what’s what. We don’t know, but we do know they’re not progressing the issue to resolution.
I can’t speak to Eurotrash dealers, many on FRF have referred to me as a Europhobe and they’re not wrong. Ducati rather soured me on marques from the olde country. I can speak to other US manufacturers and I’ve heard some 2nd hand chatter that the Japanese mfgrs are equally hard nosed if something does go south; the difference is that they go south more rarely with Japanese cars & trucks.
Focus your energy on getting the truck fixed, that’s your immediate concern. If not at the current dealer, go to another.
Address the poor customer service you’ve gotten asynchronously and don’t let them off the hook.