- Joined
- Jun 25, 2021
- Threads
- 2
- Messages
- 904
- Reaction score
- 1,413
- Location
- Los Angeles CA
- Vehicle(s)
- Nissan Frontier PRO-4X Lux FFV
- Engine
- Undecided
I am convinced that, unless you have an F-150 or a Super Duty, you are gonna wait for parts. The vehicles you mentioned are low-volume, so that probably magnified the issue.Ford parts inventory, well, isn't.
I waited a month to get a driver's side mirror when my 2019 Flex had it taken off by a deer. Finally the insurance company, who doesn't like junkyard parts, ordered a junkyard mirror because there was no ETA on a Ford part. This was in 2022.
My aunt waited nearly three months for a body panel for her Lincoln in 2023. Finally had to pull the nuclear option on the dealer and company (lots of threats) before they found one in Canada and brought it in.
I waited a month for an auxiliary battery heater for a Fusion PE Hybrid in 2017. There were only TWO of these at dealers, one in CA one in CO and neither would provide the part to the dealer in MI.
Even my NEW 2023 Maverick Lariat Hybrid, after shipment from Mexico by train to Michigan, went to a rework facility in Michigan after offloading from the train, but before delivery to the dealer. That added about 2-3 weeks to the delivery time as they had to do something to the Mav. This was at the time when these were uncommon. I waited 13 months for it.
The dealers are generally not at fault. Ford abhors ANY kind of supply chain inventory. The problem then is, people wait for parts. Cars sit at dealers waiting for parts, taking up space at the dealer or repair shop. They don't like it, customers don't like it. Nobody up the chain gives a &^%$.
Cue my surprise when my Nissan Frontier cracked its slip yoke. I asked how long it would be out, and I was told the parts were already on the way for delivery the next day. I guess that's one benefit of having a truck that was largely mechanically unchanged for its 16-year production run.
Sponsored