MikeD1
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Sep 26, 2015
- Threads
- 18
- Messages
- 1,170
- Reaction score
- 295
- Location
- Central FL
- Vehicle(s)
- 2016 Challenger Hellcat
IMO the answer is simple, this is no different than the exploding Pinto's were. It's simply a numbers game to them ! If the cost of the repairs & buybacks is below a certain threshold they'd rather eat that than pressure the suppliers to increase quality (and thus cost) or completely re-engineer the offending parts. Look how long they dodge issues where people are dying from defective product !!If an f'n driveshaft is OUT OF BALANCE (because the Engineering fix with a hose clamp places it "in balance") - the same driveshaft that is SUPPLIED BY A DRIVETRAIN VENDOR - then FORD should be going back to the Vendor and saying "WTF, you're causing my Company PR issues, irate Customers, sales, loss of labor hrs and warranty monies AND you need to figure out WHY the F your company can't produce a driveshaft and matching front/rear flanges that ARE properly balanced".
And if it's NOT a Vendor issue, then YES, one would expect the Ford Engineers to come up with a revision to "X" so that the damn car is not constantly being returned to the shop for the same damn reason - even AFTER it's supposedly been fixed with a freakin hose clamp.
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The TSB solution is a f'n hose clamp for a FIX? Are you kidding me????
Here's the bigger question:
Since the driveshaft is tied to the rear and the transmission - I want to know what mechanical harm is being done to the rear, trans and engine with a constant vibe - since most of us are driving in excess of 60-65mph during our daily commutes.
Who can answer that?
Customer satisfaction & loyalty gets bandied about and given a lot of lip service, but in the end it's all about the $$. So, with 100k+ Mustang sales under their belts, they don't really give a flip about the relatively small #'s of us who #1 actually notice the issue & #2 pursue a fix beyond the usual dealers 'they're all like that' blather or #3 bail on the car and buy something else. I'd be willing to bet there are at least 10x more cars with DS issues out there than are getting reported/complained about. The owners are either just clueless or they are rental cars & no one really cares.
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The issue of what the vibration could damage over time in the rest of the driveline (trans, rear, engine) was a HUGE concern of mine. Look at the ppl experiencing OPG failures due to the (relatively minor) vibration introduced by adding a S/C.
I wasn't about the bet the life of my engine on a 10 cent hose clamp !!
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