Side_Pce
Well-Known Member
It comes down safety. Did Ford intentionally remove the coolers to save cost? Yes. Did Ford know it would lead to eventual transmission problems? Most likely Yes. Has anyone been injured, property damaged or other financial loss outside of the car in question? Not to my knowledge.You're forgetting one thing about a class action suit: No attorney who's in the law to make a living (as opposed to doing it for a hobby) is going to take on a suit like this because the potential fee isn't known. (What are you going to do, give the attorney 1/3 of your transmission as payment for winning the suit?) Besides, the size of the class is tiny. You'd need an attorney to take this on a fee basis, and how many of you guys are going to contribute thousands to that? Most of you guys here just want coolers and a new tranny at no cost, although a few of you said you'd step up and pay for the fix.
The NHTSA route may be a logical one to take, but only if the problems are repeatable and caused a safety problem at legally driven speeds on the street. That's going to be pretty hard to come up with, especially since the cars are still driveable at legal speeds when they go into limp mode.
And a phone campaign to Ford Performance will just make you even more crazy. How long are you going to listen to busy signals when all 6 lines (or however many) are full? And let's give the poor folks at Ford Performance who have been so helpful on other issues a break. They only have the power to pass along official Ford information to customers and log in phone calls to send up the Ford food chain - and believe me, they've logged enough limp mode calls to make the higher-ups aware of the problem.
You're even screwed if you try to tell the stories to the car magazines and websites, because the '16 Tech Packages are old news, and all of the upcoming "Best handling car in the universe" tests and comparison tests between the new Camaro and the GT 350s will use '17 models. And if you hurt the reputation of one GT 350 model, you'll kill the value of all GT 350s.
So, what's the answer? There really isn't a good one, beyond going through the Ford warranty process and then all the consumer protection outlets. The lemon laws exist for a reason, but the only time I've tried to use it, the manufacturer stepped up and bought the car back from me.
So, good friggin' luck to all of us in the real world.![]()
Your point is valid in the only leg we have to stand on is... We can't track the car for longer than 20min before it shuts itself down for "safety" reasons. The fact that Ford implemented a "Limp Mode" negates any action towards them in the matter despite what we think their advertising campaign said.
It comes down to the warranty. If the trans blows in the warranty window, and no modifications were made to the trans. You get a new one... That won't be a cooler trans. If someone gets injured because they are casually cruising down the road and their trans goes into limp mode, or blows up? causing an accident (lets hope not) then the litigation will come into play.
Ford has done this before to save 7 cents a part on exploding gas tanks. You think they care about our limited market? and a 7K parts/labor bill to swap our parts out? Laughable.
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