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Is there anybody else disgusted on how lumpy and wavy these door panels are, I mean Jesus 70k truck and they can't stamp the panel straight? When I point it out to my dealer they look at me like I'm speaking a foreign language, am I the only one that notices that it's a sack of potatoes?
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Can't speak for the other guys, but don't get me wrong. I'm mostly of the same opinion; I didn't buy the truck for its fit and finish. I'm busy adding pinstripes and haven't washed it for a few months now.Guess I'm lucky I don't give a shit about these things and am still thrilled with my "$70k truck".
haha. just wait until they notice the line where theres 2 different colors of plastic on the b and c pillars.You probably just made half the Gen II owners go outside to look at their trucks with this post.
Yeah, not orange peel at all. The skin of the door panels has bits that look 'sucked in' usually near the door handles as if someone would have applied a huge pushing force on it and almost dented the door all around the handle. Pretty much every current gen F-150 has this. Take a look down the side of a clean dark colored truck sometime, putting you eye right up next to the panel looking straight down the side of the truck from front to the rear. Once you see it, you can't unsee it. You could spend all day finding horrendous examples of fit and finish on any new domestic pickup truck. The expense is in the sheer bulk of the thing, the technology, the engine that is waaaaay more fuel efficient than anything from back in the day when they "built 'em to last" and the warranties. It is not in tight tolerances and precisely finished body panels. If you want obsessive attention to detail, buy something else.
Surely you aren't talking about the intentional design, right? The indention all the way around the handles is part of the OEM molding