Jesus Christ WTF is that mess?At least its not an audi timing chain that is more abstract art than function lol
Especially when it's a eight cylinder.I'll chime in, on an engine designed to run 8500 RPM it absolutely should have double row chains.
Looks like Julio. He's the swing shift guy who fills in for vacations.You tell me, I cant even make out what their name is?
I agree definitely get a rep asap i did this when on my new 20 gt I noticed a paint issue 2 days after buying it, the rep contacted me shortly after and confirmed he'd sent the pics and video of the spot to Ford and would contact me asap once they approved it. 2w why by so I contacted him and he sent another message to Ford seeing what was going on they hadn't went over it even, after that call it was 1d and it was in the shop getting fixed i had a rental etc they supplied but if I hadn't had that rep to get the wheels in motion I'd probably still be during here waiting for a response from Ford.He was asking for the actual alpha/numeric codes....
Hopefully it’s just a loose harness or crapped sensor, but it does like it may be like some others on here where it dropped a valve...
here’s 1 thread for reference:
https://www.mustang6g.com/forums/th...-booboo-engine-replacement-experience.137204/
Nothing like putting down some coin on your dream ride and Ford quality control dumps you on your ass in 130mi, eh?
Before you do anything else, call the Ford 800#, get a Regional Rep and a Case number started - doesn’t matter if the Service Center has not even checked it yet.
Getting it documented and a Case # early on protects your ass and also puts your ride at “priority” for the Service Center and Ford to make you whole with expedited repairs. If you squeak loud enough (in a professional manner), you can probably get an extended warranty or a maintenance plan for the inconvenience.
I'd like to see someone design a gear drive kit for the Coyote platform.Or make it a real badass and just run gear driven cams problem solved.
Thats exactly what they did. The majority of issues with it were cars used on the track. And they figured that percentage was so low it didn't matterThat makes literally 0 sense, especially in the high dollar vehicle market. It may be cheaper to just replace a $20 toy rather than spend thousands of dollars re-tooling the factory to fix the defect. But there's no way that it's cheaper for a car manufacturer to have to replace a $30,000 longblock or spend $65,000 for a buyback over and over and over again rather than make a change in manufacturing.
You think GM back in the late 2000s when they had all the valve guide issues with the LS7 thought to themselves "screw paying an extra $7 on a better valve guide to address the issue many customers are reporting, lets keep putting in these cheaper ones and then replace an entire $20,000 longblock when the valve inevitably drops and wipes out the entire engine".
The owner should gave kept it like that...with documentation. It would be worth something later down the line. A definite 1 of 1 that could not be ordered.
I'm sure you've seen similar before. And while I too doubt it's different in automotive, I can't help thinking about a recent post here, a week or two ago. Somebody mentioned a new GT arriving in Germany, with the driver seat being the customer specified Recaro, but the passenger seat being a regular seat. Shipped like that to the dealer in Germany.
How can something like that even happen? Nobody, not even one person at Ford USA, took a look at the car? Ford should win some kind of price for that. One of the funniest things I've read about here. A photo should be taken and posted back to the Ford plant: "spot one mistake".
Thanks for the chuckle.Did i miss something here????
First sentance “GT350R HEP”
HEP = Hennessy Eng Performance??
Would this not indicate supercharger was added? If so HEP had the front of engine open to install sc, which could fall back on them? But good luck with that!!!
I drove my 68 camaro so on it all the time in 99! Wish I could've had this car back thenCan we add in a variable... who here has actually driven a 350 on the Autobahn?
Or make it a real badass and just run gear driven cams problem solved. Cool noises and no problems. Honda ran it on VFR750's and those turned way higher RPMS although obviously much smaller displacement.