- Thread starter
- #1
Do you know this to be a fact or are you assuming? Krown states that all manufacturers have signed off that their process does not create warranty concerns. I was thinking of getting it done as soon as pick up my vehicle but I’m on the fence.You have a decent warranty against rust, so I wouldn't bother with these as I can only see it creating warranty concerns.
Fact. If Krown got manufacturers to sign off, then for unibody vehicles they must not be doing what they are doing to this 1960s car video and drilling holes. Maybe they are just using existing ports or removing some components to spray in instead of getting drill happy.Do you know this to be a fact or are you assuming? Krown states that all manufacturers have signed off that their process does not create warranty concerns. I was thinking of getting it done as soon as pick up my vehicle but I’m on the fence.
Interesting. Not trying to argue, but Krown says otherwise (and they do drill holes). I guess only someone from Ford can give a final answer.Fact. If Krown got manufacturers to sign off, then for unibody vehicles they must not be doing what they are doing to this 1960s car video and drilling holes. Maybe they are just using existing ports or removing some components to spray in instead of getting drill happy.
I wouldn't trust Krown, and I wouldn't let anyone drill holes in my modern unibody vehicle, unless they just mean in doors or something which isn't actually "the frame". Still, modern vehicles are already built with great rust proofing, and while you'd think that putting icky goop everywhere can only help, who knows what weep holes the engineers designed that will end up getting clogged with this stuff.Interesting. Not trying to argue, but Krown says otherwise (and they do drill holes). I guess only someone from Ford can give a final answer.
In my opinion, new vehicles are NOT built with rust prevention in mind. In Pa, you better rustproof And drill holes if you want your vehicle to last. To hell with the mfg warranty, they don't care. I do. Mike.I wouldn't trust Krown, and I wouldn't let anyone drill holes in my modern unibody vehicle, unless they just mean in doors or something which isn't actually "the frame". Still, modern vehicles are already built with great rust proofing, and while you'd think that putting icky goop everywhere can only help, who knows what weep holes the engineers designed that will end up getting clogged with this stuff.
There's also those things where people quote magnuson-moss in that the manufacturer has the burden of proof to show that the aftermarket modification caused the damage, but reality is that they simply say "nope, our tech thinks it caused the problem" and voila, you're black listed, and if you want to dispute it you have to hope the manf. takes your side over the dealer technician (not really inclined to) and otherwise you need a lawyer which most of the time isn't worth disputing. People went through this with Hyundai/Kia over using something as simple as an aftermarket oil filter... maybe not legal, but who has the time and money to fight it?
Same thing with Apple insisting you use Apple cables to charge their poop or they won't honor the warranty, not technically legal, but common anyway.
I'd let Ford fix any rust that happens in the first five years, if any, and then do aftermarket stuff when its no longer under warranty IMO.
I see you live in Texas. I have lived in Wisconsin for 69 years and believe me, if you are planning on keeping your vehicle more than five years, you better do something to protect it or it will cost you dearly. Once the rust starts there is nothing that stops it. You can only try to slow it down.I wouldn't trust Krown, and I wouldn't let anyone drill holes in my modern unibody vehicle, unless they just mean in doors or something which isn't actually "the frame". Still, modern vehicles are already built with great rust proofing, and while you'd think that putting icky goop everywhere can only help, who knows what weep holes the engineers designed that will end up getting clogged with this stuff.
There's also those things where people quote magnuson-moss in that the manufacturer has the burden of proof to show that the aftermarket modification caused the damage, but reality is that they simply say "nope, our tech thinks it caused the problem" and voila, you're black listed, and if you want to dispute it you have to hope the manf. takes your side over the dealer technician (not really inclined to) and otherwise you need a lawyer which most of the time isn't worth disputing. People went through this with Hyundai/Kia over using something as simple as an aftermarket oil filter... maybe not legal, but who has the time and money to fight it?
Same thing with Apple insisting you use Apple cables to charge their poop or they won't honor the warranty, not technically legal, but common anyway.
I'd let Ford fix any rust that happens in the first five years, if any, and then do aftermarket stuff when its no longer under warranty IMO.