Cynical Guy
unread,Oct 26, 2018, 8:36:58 AM10/26/18You do not have permission to delete messages in this group
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I usually don't take recalls seriously. Why? Two short stories. One, back in 1999, I bought a 1999 Ford Escort new. Well, new for the most part. It was brought in on dealer exchange and I got a new car delivered with 103-kilometres on it. I never feltlike it was a "new" car. Anyway, about a year later, I had it in for its regular service. The service advisor told me I had a recall on the car. I asked what the recall was about, and she said not to worry. I watched as she went to the parts department,and came out with an envelope. Again. I asked what the recall was about. "It's OK, I'll look after it", was her response. As she started to open the driver's door, I pushed it shut. "What is the recall?", I asked. Her answer? "Our records show that yourcar was built without the French air bag labels." My response? "This isn't Quebec (I live in Ontario), and I don't speak French. DO NOT put those labels on my sun visors!" the labels were not installed. Fast forward to 2002. I was trading my Escort inon a 2002 Focus (I drove a lot in those days, racking up 30,000-kilometres annually). When they assessed my Escort, they told me my car had an outstanding recall. I said I knew, and I told them they could install those labels AFTER I handed them the keyswhen I picked up my Focus.
My second story involved my 2012 Focus, which I purchased in May of 2011. The car was transferred into my wife's name in 2016, when I bought my 2016 Focus. Anyway, about two months after I had taken possession of the 2012, I got a letter from Ford. The envelopesaid, "IMPORTANT INFORMATION RE: RECALL NOTICE". Yes, it was all in capital letters. I opened the envelope, and this is what it said, without a word of a lie (I still have the letter, as I keep all factory correspondences and service receipts): "It had beenbrought to our attention that your 2012 Ford Focus was manufactured with the incorrect emissions label. Find enclosed the replacement label, and a diagram showing the location of the label. Please remove the incorrect label and replace it with the correctlabel. Thank you for your patronage of Ford Motor Company." Two minutes later, my car was "all safe". At least I didn't have to go to the dealership.
On October 25th, I read this announcement on MSN, com, that there is a recall on 1.5-million Ford Focuses (I say it "Focii", you know, one Focus, many Focii, like one radius, many radii) from 2012 to 2018. Only 200,000 are in Canada, the rest are in the U.S.
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"Ford recalls nearly 1.5M Focuses because engines may stall"
Detroit - Ford is recalling 1.5 million Focus compact cars in North America because a fuel system problem can cause the engines to stall without warning.
The recall covers cars from the 2012 through 2018 model years with 2-litre four-cylinder engines.
Ford says a valve in the fuel system can stick in the open position, causing too much vacuum, and an engine control computer may not detect the problem. Excessive vacuum can cause the gas tank to deform (really?*), as well as other problems.
The recall came after the U.S. government's National Highway Traffic Safety Administration presented owner complaints to Ford. About 1.3 million vehicles are in the U.S.
Dealers will reprogram the computer with new software that will detect a stuck valve, which the company says will take care of the problem in most cases. They'll also inspect the valve, a carbon canister and gas tank and replace them if needed.
Ford says it's not aware of any crashes or injuries caused by the problem.
The recall is expected to begin on December 10.
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That is good timing, as I have my 2016 scheduled for its 30-month service on December 14th.
Just to let you know!
[At the end of one of the sentences, I added "really?*" Back years ago, when I started working where I am now, there was another part of the plane that manufactured high-voltage transformers. A lot of them were huge! They had this area with several oil storagetanks with the transformer oil stored in them. This one day, they were pumping oil out of the one tank, when suddenly, the tank sucked in and collapsed. Now, this was a tank that was about 8-feet in diameter by 20-feet high. It was made from one-half-inchplate. The tank collapsed like a Pepsi can when you crush it. The cause? The pressure in the tank went down to "just" one P.S.I. under the atmospheric pressure. In other words, it developed a vacuum. That vacuum was enough to cause the tank that sizeto collapse so easily. It was quite a sight! That tank sat there for the longest time after that. It was just amazing that so little vacuum could cause such damage. Imaging how little a vacuum will cause a car's gas tank to "deform"?]