sebounet
Well-Known Member
Just for aluminium parts and for 2016 and aboveWhy would they not cover it? Isn't corrosion 6 year / unlimited mile warranty?
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Just for aluminium parts and for 2016 and aboveWhy would they not cover it? Isn't corrosion 6 year / unlimited mile warranty?
The corrosion warranty is a joke....according to Ford only corrosion that creates holes is covered under the 5yr unlimited miles warrantyWhy would they not cover it? Isn't corrosion 6 year / unlimited mile warranty?
Ask to see the reason for the rejection from Ford..mine was rejected because they said they could not see the corrosion, so we scraped paint off, and brushed the white oxidation out of the pits and took new pictures... I got a new hood. I was also under the 3/36 warranty, not the 6 year corrosion warranty. But I got a new hood with pits from corrosion. Not holes....the dealer should of submitted pictures to Ford, and received an specific reason for rejection. Read that and carefully decipher the wording......The corrosion warranty is a joke....according to Ford only corrosion that creates holes is covered under the 5yr unlimited miles warranty
I will likely call ford before I go through with getting it repaired...but from what I understand corrosion is pretty much covered under the 3yr 36k warranty no matter what. I’ll let ya know what I find out. The lifetime guarantee the dealer is offering me on their repair is tempting.Ask to see the reason for the rejection from Ford..mine was rejected because they said they could not see the corrosion, so we scraped paint off, and brushed the white oxidation out of the pits and took new pictures... I got a new hood. I was also under the 3/36 warranty, not the 6 year corrosion warranty. But I got a new hood with pits from corrosion. Not holes....the dealer should of submitted pictures to Ford, and received an specific reason for rejection. Read that and carefully decipher the wording......
Just make sure your dealer submits a claim with pictures, then if you get a rejection letter read it carefully. My rejection letter said they could not see any holes or pitting. That was because we left paint intact. After scraping paint off the corrosion and pitting in the metal were clearly visible and I got a new hood. This is Fords way of saving money, deny first claim, put it back on owner to try again.....I will likely call ford before I go through with getting it repaired...but from what I understand corrosion is pretty much covered under the 3yr 36k warranty no matter what. I’ll let ya know what I find out. The lifetime guarantee the dealer is offering me on their repair is tempting.
I was at the body-shop yesterday to get my color-specs measured and they showed me how the hood corrosion starts under the edges/seams indeed. They had 3 replacement hood's in, all owners had the same issue after the passed winter. Before mounting the hoods they will spray the seams with dinitrol since the corrosion can also come back on the new hoods. Making me think that the new hoods are a waste of money this way, spot repair and dinitrol treatment might be cheaper and also have the chance for the corrosion to come back, but at-least the car stays original.I have seen it before. It actually appears to originate from under the leading edge where the seam sealer is.
I don't know how to fix your car, but here's how you can get some satisfaction: Drive up to your dealer service area on a busy day. With a can of spray paint, write a message to Ford and/or your dealer on your hood. With a wrench you brought with you, remove the hood and place it in the service line. With the sledge hammer you also brought with you, pound the hood into tin foil. Get in the car, and drive off, hoodless, in a Cars and Coffee style burnout.I called Ford and spoke to a CSR. They told me there's nothing that can be done because it's outside of any warranty. The car is barely 3 years old. Anybody have any suggestions?
Or it the hood is light enough:I don't know how to fix your car, but here's how you can get some satisfaction: Drive up to your dealer service area on a busy day. With a can of spray paint, write a message to Ford and/or your dealer on your hood. With a wrench you brought with you, remove the hood and place it in the service line. With the sledge hammer you also brought with you, pound the hood into tin foil. Get in the car, and drive off, hoodless, in a Cars and Coffee style burnout.
I got mine back 2 weeks ago, paint not perfect, the shop said they wanted to let it cure more before working on paint, I was also missing the emissions and ac stickers. So the car has been sitting at home in the garage for 2 weeks, will take it back to shop soon, I am seeing more defects...might need a repaint.
Yeah, but there are 3rd party companies that reproduce those labels. You can hardly tell them apart from factory labels.FYI, the emissions label and AC label both have to be ordered through a ridiculously outdated system Ford still uses. The dealer has to fax an order form for the required labels and eventually Ford will snail-mail them to the dealer, complete with hand written VIN on the emissions label.
If you're ever unfortunate enough to need the sticker in the door jamb, they take even longer, and a Ford rep has to personally install them.
You can't make this shit up.
Yeah, we use one of them here, occasionally. With some of those companies, you only have to send in a photo of the original to get a copy. Ford is super in the past on this one.Yeah, but there are 3rd party companies that reproduce those labels. You can hardly tell them apart from factory labels.
I can look up the company if you really need me to.