FWIW I just got my second recall notice on my 23 Toyota Corolla Cross for driver side airbag. Not sure if this second recall directly effects my vehicle but this recall is to fix the fix they did on the first recall 
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1980 TI99/4A I k on the board. I wrote my own programs in BASIC and saved them to a cassette tape recorder. Bought it at a hardware store.1981. Sinclair ZX-81. Cost one hundred bucks I could barely scrape together. Had 1K of ram. Not one meg, one K. Called in sick to stay home and play with Basic.
apple ][, 1978. had 48k. cassette tape (until i could buy a 5.25" floppy drive). those were the days..1981. Sinclair ZX-81. Cost one hundred bucks I could barely scrape together. Had 1K of ram. Not one meg, one K. Called in sick to stay home and play with Basic.
Wow, I DID Have one of these. Bought it in 1982...1981. Sinclair ZX-81. Cost one hundred bucks I could barely scrape together. Had 1K of ram. Not one meg, one K. Called in sick to stay home and play with Basic.
"Maybe there's something wrong with their QMS"........sorry but I just had to...Looking at the recall list on the Ford Maverick I count at least 6 and there maybe more. They've been fined $165M by the NHTSA for the delay in recognizing the rear view camera problem and 9 months after knowing about the problem, they still don't have a fix. Maybe there's something wrong with their QMS. Maybe IATF 16949 Quality Certification is just window dressing; because, if it really was a Quality Management System, Ford wouldn't be the world leader in recalls. Maybe it's time they remember the lessons taught by W. Edwards Deming back in the 1980s and back at a time when their slogan was Quality is Job One; then, just maybe they could make a car that wasn't destine for a recall.

Ford is not alone in this. At least the Ford recalls have been mostly minor issues where the Maverick is concerned. Hyundai has had far more serious recalls. My coworker got one for what was supposedly a faulty transmission sensor of some sort on his 2024 Santa Fe. It got replaced...then the tranny died due to a combination of malfunctions between the new sensor AND the original transmission. LOL. Took him over two MONTHS to get a new tranny from Hyundai.Looking at the recall list on the Ford Maverick I count at least 6 and there maybe more. They've been fined $165M by the NHTSA for the delay in recognizing the rear view camera problem and 9 months after knowing about the problem, they still don't have a fix. Maybe there's something wrong with their QMS. Maybe IATF 16949 Quality Certification is just window dressing; because, if it really was a Quality Management System, Ford wouldn't be the world leader in recalls. Maybe it's time they remember the lessons taught by W. Edwards Deming back in the 1980s and back at a time when their slogan was Quality is Job One; then, just maybe they could make a car that wasn't destine for a recall.
And may I add, no fuel gauge. Just had to keep track of your miles.Yeah... I'm old enough to remember how exciting it was if a car hit 100k miles. Basically, the end of life. I remember my father had a 1969 station wagon and by the time we put 40k mi on it it was already a big rust bucket. So by comparison to those days today's vehicles are much better built. And I'm sure there are a lot of people here that remember the days of no air conditioning, no power windows, no FM radio, the old cigarette lighter and ashtray, bench seats front. And many other things I don't remember.
My wife reminded too since it didn't become law until like 1973 or 1974 that some cars didn't even have seat belts. Or they did they were just those little lap belts that would snap your spine when you got into a wreck.And may I add, no fuel gauge. Just had to keep track of your miles.
not all recalls apply to all models.Looking at the recall list on the Ford Maverick I count at least 6 and there maybe more. They've been fined $165M by the NHTSA for the delay in recognizing the rear view camera problem and 9 months after knowing about the problem, they still don't have a fix. Maybe there's something wrong with their QMS. Maybe IATF 16949 Quality Certification is just window dressing; because, if it really was a Quality Management System, Ford wouldn't be the world leader in recalls. Maybe it's time they remember the lessons taught by W. Edwards Deming back in the 1980s and back at a time when their slogan was Quality is Job One; then, just maybe they could make a car that wasn't destine for a recall.
How about the dimmer switch being on the floor that you hit with your left foot! I had an old ford, 59 or 60 I can't remember, that had a pedal on the floor for the windshield washer fluid. When you started pumping it activated the wipers for a few swipes. I punked my little sister by telling her the car had automatic wipers that could detect rain - she never saw the foot actionAnd may I add, no fuel gauge. Just had to keep track of your miles.

Is that a hybrid thing ?In my opinion, the most serious issue regarding the Ford Maverick that Ford had to deal with is issue with the truck completed losing power while in motion. It started happening around February and March of 2024.
Many members of MaverickTruckClub posted their incidents with a lot of them nearly being involved in serious accidents. Ford got on it. Developed a fix, and sent out the information about the fix.
It appears to have significantly resolved the issue. There may still be a few outliers that still need the fix but the most important thing to note is that Ford got right on it.