Ford put 400 miles on my Raptor during warranty work

Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.

911 Crazy

FRF Supporting Member
Supporting Member
Joined
Jul 23, 2019
Posts
7,653
Reaction score
3,136
Location
Maine
It’s a BlackVue so pretty low profile to begin with. Also I had the radar detector in the pictures below out of the truck during service.

Still can’t believe I have a new Raptor on the way and a new trip to Raptor Assault in my future!

Thanks again for all the help guys!

View attachment 140118

View attachment 140119

Thanks for the disclosure. What brand is the detector and how is it mounted?
 

Troutrad

Full Access Member
Joined
Jan 24, 2020
Posts
587
Reaction score
594
Location
Kalispell, MT
I agree 100% with the part in red. I have done some home inspections for attorneys on behalf of their clients that are filing suit against their original inspector. Once it gets to that point, my experience is that the inspector missed, not just one, but several major issues. Things that would be nearly impossible to miss if you have a pulse and a working set of eyeballs.

I am thrilled with getting the hacks out of the business. People love to throw us under the bus, plumbers, electricians, real estate agents, etc. But, at the end of the day, if you are any good at your job, you will always prevail with the facts.

If you do shit work, the facts will not be on your side and you will pay a price, but it reflects on all of us, to an extent.
I WISH that was how it worked. Lawsuits rarely follow an actionable malpractice incident. I’ve been on our State board, having been on a panel where we suggest to attorneys whether a case is actionable or not. Board has 3 med professionals (including a hospital rep) and 3 attorneys. I’ve seen dozens of cases (and 2 of my own) and every case I saw there was a vote of 6-0 against the case proceeding. A few did anyway but none went to court. Yet I know a few docs (one in particular) who really deserved to have action taken against them. Those “hacks” are still in the business of providing sub-optimal medicine. Yet our hands our tied in reporting these cases because, you guessed it, threat of lawsuit. The legal system is broken and does not serve to rid ourselves of the few (hopefully) bad apples. A neurosurg friend/colleague who is brilliant, skilled, personable and widely known to be the best in his field has been sued more times than I care to count. Fortunately, he has never had to settle or go to court. His specialty is the most prone to be sued (pushing 20% chance of getting sued each year). Realize that’s anecdotal but it’s pervasive.

I wish the system was set up to efficiently remove the chaff, but it doesn’t! And the only fix requires legislation, which is impossible because the most powerful lobby around....trial lawyers. All they have to do is pander to their buddies, the politicians who are made up mostly of lawyers.
 

GCATX

King Dingaling
Joined
Oct 6, 2018
Posts
9,053
Reaction score
25,692
Location
Central Texas
I wish the system was set up to efficiently remove the chaff, but it doesn’t! And the only fix requires legislation, which is impossible because the most powerful lobby around....trial lawyers. All they have to do is pander to their buddies, the politicians who are made up mostly of lawyers.

You're probably right. TX is a difficult state to become an inspector, tons of classes, pass a state and national test. I think the pass rate is around 30% for the first try. Still some idiots do sneak through. We are required to carry 100k e&o insurance, I think I carry a million. Some years before I started, insurance was not a requirement. After insurance was required, the lawsuits started. lol. We are also governed by a state board, if they vote to pay out for your negligence, you gotta pay them back.

I've never been sued or even had a hint of an issue, knock on wood. Thousands of properties inspected and only had a handful of callbacks for an issue. Every single time, I sat down with my customer and went over the report and showed them where I reported whatever they think the issue is. It's amazing to me how many agents and buyers never even read the reports.

Just my little contribution to keeping this thread off in the weeds. :^)
 

Flatom

Member
Joined
Mar 2, 2020
Posts
25
Reaction score
15
Location
Florida
I get that but not all jurors are dumb. These “medical experts” that testify are usually qualified doctors that teach medicine or have many years of experience. The defense lawyers usually call experts of their own too. It often comes down to whose expert is more believable. But yeah doctors who testify against his peers are going to be highly unpopular (hence the “trial ******” name). Snitches get...

As much as some of ya’ll hate on lawyers, I keep seeing forum people say “get a lawyer”
whenever a dealer messes up an oil change or takes too long to fix the truck. You hate lawyers until you need one; and nobody wants to be in that position.

I’ve said enough and don’t need to comment any more on the fine doctor’s expert opinion on lawyers.
No the term “trial *****” is a term the attorneys and their staff use. I learned that from my paralegal sister in law. I do not hate lawyers only despise unethical lawyers. There is definitely a need for attorneys but there are so many “slip and fall” etc wait till someone trips on a blade of grass at your home or office and claims life injuries.
 
OP
OP
D

DrJacks

Full Access Member
Joined
Feb 24, 2020
Posts
574
Reaction score
428
Location
Utah
Thanks for the disclosure. What brand is the detector and how is it mounted?

It’s a Uniden R3. From the testing results I’ve seen, it competes with the most expensive detectors and is not too pricey. Lots of good features. The mount goes to the rear view mirror stem. It’s some no name brand from amazon.
 

John813

FRF Addict
Joined
Feb 2, 2015
Posts
1,129
Reaction score
847
Location
PSL/Jupiter
Well, sounds you got a resolution out of this one.

Dealer drove my dad's trackhawk for 35 miles or so for warranty work. 100 miles later the trans failed.

Was covered under warranty but still...
 

911 Crazy

FRF Supporting Member
Supporting Member
Joined
Jul 23, 2019
Posts
7,653
Reaction score
3,136
Location
Maine
It’s a Uniden R3. From the testing results I’ve seen, it competes with the most expensive detectors and is not too pricey. Lots of good features. The mount goes to the rear view mirror stem. It’s some no name brand from amazon.

Thanks. Your set up looks and operates great! What did the install on the cameras run?
 

Pokahpolice

Active Member
Joined
Mar 21, 2020
Posts
89
Reaction score
73
Location
Maine
Isn’t that why you have insurance? For medical malpractice lawsuits for move forward, there would have to be at least one doctor in your field willing to testify against you. If one of your colleagues is calling foul, then it’s not a frivolous lawsuit even if you ultimately prevail. Get off your high horse. Doctors **** up too just like everyone else and if it weren’t for lawyers keeping you on your toes, your profession would be full of hacks. That’s a good thing for our society.

Again, this was more of a customer service issue than a legal issue and it was clearly resolved.

You completely missed the point of the post. If the OP posted the video and released the name of the dealership he could have opened himself up to a lawsuit. Regardless of right or wrong / win or lose, the legal fees to defend yourself are real. @Troutrad was simply giving an example. I was sued by a former employer for $4M...I live in a $150K home. I'm not a rich man and was forced to come up with a $50K retainer to defend myself. I received paperwork yesterday that the case was dropped. I'll get the majority of that money back but I'm still out over $15K simply because I pissed off a guy with money.

Point of the story - don't **** off guys with the means to screw with you. Even if you're right.
 
Top