- Joined
- Mar 14, 2022
- Threads
- 6
- Messages
- 121
- Reaction score
- 350
- Location
- DFW, Texas, USA, Earth
- Vehicle(s)
- '03 SuperDuty, misc others
- Your Bronco Model
- Badlands
- Thread starter
- #1
Even though I haven't been waiting as long as many of you, I've been following along for quite a while now. I like to stay connected to what is going on in the car markets in general, but especially with Ford as I'm a big fan.
Over the last year or so there was talk on other platforms about buying a 'covid' truck - something produced during or near the first waves of shutdowns, and the potential quality issues that on again/off again production flows could introduce. This morphed into all kinds of discussions, but given all the 'new' problems with supply chains (all tiers) it has me wondering if buying a new vehicle now is taking on extra risk.
I don't think consistent labor resources to produce vehicles is where the risk is. To me, it is in the substitution of parts that may or may not meet spec. How long until a supplier (or Ford) makes a part substitution that isn't up to snuff. This could show up in ways we wouldn't suspect - like minor redesigns to use available parts instead of those initally intended. I keep my vehicles for a really long time. I don't want something that won't last as long as I'm used to just so Ford or a supplier can meet sales numbers and/or keep shareholders happy.
On the Super-Duty side of the business, they have already removed options from the configurator. You can't even order upfitter switches anymore. This sucks, but the optimist in me says they are doing that because they can't source the needed components at the quality level they want. How long until they cave, though? You could say it already happened with the early Bronco hardtops. Ship 'em now, we'll fix 'em later...
I'm as excited about getting a Bronco as anyone, but are we taking on extra risk buying new right now? In 4 years are people going to be shying away from '21 and '22 models because of not yet exposed long-term quality issues?
Over the last year or so there was talk on other platforms about buying a 'covid' truck - something produced during or near the first waves of shutdowns, and the potential quality issues that on again/off again production flows could introduce. This morphed into all kinds of discussions, but given all the 'new' problems with supply chains (all tiers) it has me wondering if buying a new vehicle now is taking on extra risk.
I don't think consistent labor resources to produce vehicles is where the risk is. To me, it is in the substitution of parts that may or may not meet spec. How long until a supplier (or Ford) makes a part substitution that isn't up to snuff. This could show up in ways we wouldn't suspect - like minor redesigns to use available parts instead of those initally intended. I keep my vehicles for a really long time. I don't want something that won't last as long as I'm used to just so Ford or a supplier can meet sales numbers and/or keep shareholders happy.
On the Super-Duty side of the business, they have already removed options from the configurator. You can't even order upfitter switches anymore. This sucks, but the optimist in me says they are doing that because they can't source the needed components at the quality level they want. How long until they cave, though? You could say it already happened with the early Bronco hardtops. Ship 'em now, we'll fix 'em later...
I'm as excited about getting a Bronco as anyone, but are we taking on extra risk buying new right now? In 4 years are people going to be shying away from '21 and '22 models because of not yet exposed long-term quality issues?
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