- First Name
- Jonah
- Joined
- Mar 9, 2023
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- 2
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- 17
- Reaction score
- 37
- Location
- California
- Vehicle(s)
- 2023 Base
- Your Bronco Model
- Base
- Thread starter
- #1
Around 2 weeks ago I took my Bronco (2023 base manual 2dr) in for its 30,000 mile service, which is the first major service where they do more than change the oil and top up the washer fluid. It had been driving great and not making any noise, so I was surprised when later that afternoon I got a call from the advisor saying they found "metal flakes" or "shavings" (I forget his exact wording) on the rear diff drain plug. I haven't seen the damage with my own eyes so I don't know how bad it is. A cursory look online suggests that fine powdery shavings is normal wear, but any larger chunks are bad news. He recommended replacing it while the vehicle was still under warranty to save me 3-4 grand. Unfortunately the parts they need have, in his words, "no ETA" so they're just hanging onto my Bronco indefinitely until they can repair it. In the meantime, they've given me a Mustang convertible as a loaner (it was the only other Ford available that day at the local Enterprise, apparently).
If I were only planning to commute during that time, I'd be fine this this arrangement. A bright yellow muscle car isn't really my style, but it does all the car things a car needs to do on the daily drive. However, I'm planning to drive from where I live in the Bay Area up to Oregon this coming Saturday, a trip I've been planning for months and would really not like to cancel. I am expecting to encounter some snow on my route and was counting on having the Bronco's 4WD to get me through if things got hairy. I mean we're not exactly talking Ice Road Truckers here, but better safe than sorry... Only now I'm stuck with a car that has, charitably, a very different set of capabilities.
So, what would you do in this situation? Time is running out to make a decision. Do you think they're right to nip this in the bud while it's still under warranty? Or are they making a bigger deal out of normal wear than they need to, and I should just have them change the fluid as normal and give my Bronco back? If I do have them go through with the repair, will I have any success pestering them to give me a loaner with a skill set closer to the vehicle I actually bought? Any advice is appreciated.
UPDATE so you don't have to hunt through the rest of the thread: What was at first described to me as "metal flakes/shavings" turned out to be big chunks, I don't know exactly what part they broke off of but it definitely wasn't an overreaction to stop driving the Bronco and let them replace the rear end under warranty. Have a look for yourself.
As of writing they will apparently have the new rear end assembly in tomorrow (and that's surprising since some people have been waiting months for the same part), but they likely won't finish installing it before I leave. The consensus as far as the loaner seems to be "people still buy Mustangs back east" so I'm just going to put the miles on their car and pick up the Bronco when I get home.
If I were only planning to commute during that time, I'd be fine this this arrangement. A bright yellow muscle car isn't really my style, but it does all the car things a car needs to do on the daily drive. However, I'm planning to drive from where I live in the Bay Area up to Oregon this coming Saturday, a trip I've been planning for months and would really not like to cancel. I am expecting to encounter some snow on my route and was counting on having the Bronco's 4WD to get me through if things got hairy. I mean we're not exactly talking Ice Road Truckers here, but better safe than sorry... Only now I'm stuck with a car that has, charitably, a very different set of capabilities.
So, what would you do in this situation? Time is running out to make a decision. Do you think they're right to nip this in the bud while it's still under warranty? Or are they making a bigger deal out of normal wear than they need to, and I should just have them change the fluid as normal and give my Bronco back? If I do have them go through with the repair, will I have any success pestering them to give me a loaner with a skill set closer to the vehicle I actually bought? Any advice is appreciated.
UPDATE so you don't have to hunt through the rest of the thread: What was at first described to me as "metal flakes/shavings" turned out to be big chunks, I don't know exactly what part they broke off of but it definitely wasn't an overreaction to stop driving the Bronco and let them replace the rear end under warranty. Have a look for yourself.
As of writing they will apparently have the new rear end assembly in tomorrow (and that's surprising since some people have been waiting months for the same part), but they likely won't finish installing it before I leave. The consensus as far as the loaner seems to be "people still buy Mustangs back east" so I'm just going to put the miles on their car and pick up the Bronco when I get home.
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