17LightningGT
Well-Known Member
- Thread starter
- #46
I would definitely inquire and ask exactly what all is being replaced. Only because as others have stated, once catastrophic internal failure occurs, metal starts getting bounced around inside of the motor and those particles are bound to be nearly anywhere.
Did the damage wipe the cams? Did it score the crank?
I’m really surprised Ford did not opt to just send out a new long block and be done with it - far less labor costs, far less room for any errors and eliminates the remote chances of the vehicle having to come back again for warranty re-work. Not that I doubt your Tech or Dealership isn’t capable of doing the job right - but when there’s that type of internal damage, it just really surprised me they didn’t send out a complete engine.
I'm still questioning why I didn't get a long block from Ford. The labor alone would by my guess, equal out on the cost difference.
As far as I know, the short block comes with a new rotating assembly. The only parts that I believe they are going to re-use are the cylinder head, and maybe the timing components(chain, phasers, guides and tensioners) and the bolt on accessories. As far as the labor costs of it coming back, thats going to be on them, but, if it isn't right after this repair is done, then at that point I believe I'm going to start seeking some compensation for paying for a car I can't use. It is starting to get ridiculous, paying for a brand new car to have it sit in pieces at the dealer .
As long as there are no dents and scratches I won't be mad. If paint has to be repaired, I won't be so happy about that either.The roof can handle the weight no problem. The issue I'd have is any paint to paint contact. Like you said, the towels dont cover the whole roof.
The hood is pretty light, so the weight won't be a problem.
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