You're right. Ford glossed over the battery problem by taking the road of least expense and PR problem . . . telling customers to drive more, etc. Utter nonsense. Seems it finally dawned on them their customers weren't buying it and the problem wasn't going away on its own. They finally ponied up for the 2025 hybrid and put in the battery they should have used all along. Hopefully, whoever made the decision to use that crappy OEM wet battery and then try to hoodwink their customers over the problem was fired.This whole thread is ridiculous. To expect an owner of a Maverick Hybrid to go out and have to buy a charger and plug their vehicle in at night is rediculous. We didn't buy a stupid plug in EV. That is just a bandaid approach to a bleeding artery. Ford has known about this problem since the 2022 model year and is just getting around to supposedly doing something about it? I suspect they were ignoring it, saying publicly we "weren't driving enough. Please drive more", until the shear number of people having this problem (basically every owner of a hybrid Maverick) grew so large and vocal that they had to finally do something about it so sales weren't affected. This is the next "back up camera defect" P.R. disaster for the company. The recall for this will be so huge that the impact to future sales will yet to be seen. Also, someone pointed out that other vehicles like Subaru's have this issue. Who cares? That's not our problem. That is deflection. That is Subaru's problem. This is Ford's problem to solve, and the clock is quickly ticking on this for a solution to be announced by March 30th, as they have publicly promised.
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