View Full Version : I now hate Ford with a passion.
ozwinner
15th June 2007, 09:59 PM
I now hate Ford, this, after being a staunch Ford fan for over 30 years.:((:((:((
I bought a new F250 from Ford 5 years ago, the payments have been deducted from my bank account every month as would be expected.
I had a balloon payment of $20,000ish due at the end of last month.
Ford sent me a pay out figure or $18360 one month in advance.
No problem, I will pay it off over the month.
I paid the pay out figure with 5 days to spare.
Now they are hassling me for $1000 that didnt show up on their system, plus interest, I have the Bpay print out that proves that I paid it. :?
Al :(
dazzler
15th June 2007, 10:19 PM
What did you think of the F250 and which engine :?
ozwinner
15th June 2007, 10:27 PM
and which engine :?
I got the engine that blows up at 25,000kms.
Do a search on google for 5.4 litre
Dont buy one....look here. (http://www.google.com.au/search?hl=en&safe=off&q=ford+motor+5.4+blown+spark+plugs&btnG=Search&meta=)
Al :((
Rossluck
16th June 2007, 07:35 AM
I got the engine that blows up at 25,000kms.
Do a search on google for 5.4 litre
Dont buy one....look here. (http://www.google.com.au/search?hl=en&safe=off&q=ford+motor+5.4+blown+spark+plugs&btnG=Search&meta=)
Al :((
That's fascinating, Al. Isn't it pathetic that an engine would blow spark plugs out if it's head in this day and age.
My sister and her Hubby have just been through a war of words with Toyota. Their 55,000K but two weeks out of warranty Camry's engine died because of oil sludge. It's a big problem in the US with Camrys. Run a search: "camry oil sludge".
Iain
16th June 2007, 09:24 AM
Not to mention the Nissan Patrol 3 litre turbo diesel, they seem to just manage to squeak through the warranty period before suffering massive hernias.
The 3 Litre Navara is OK though, different engine that gets oil to where it is needed.
Zed
16th June 2007, 11:01 AM
makes me want to go out and buy a kia.:)
womble
16th June 2007, 12:14 PM
makes me want to go out and buy a kia.:)
nah, rocsta is better :cool:
Rossluck
16th June 2007, 12:16 PM
makes me want to go out and buy a kia.:)
I had a little Kia K2700 truck. It did 180,000 k's without missing a beat. I still miss it. I now have an Isuzu that think's it's a washing machine and that I'm a dirty shirt. It shakes hell out of me all day.
I was telling SWMBO about Al's post, and she told me that her Camry's just been recalled for the second time. :?
markharrison
16th June 2007, 01:46 PM
Al,
As you say, you can show you have paid it. If you have a printed receipt already from the online bank transaction, fax it to them. If you don't have that, go to your online banking and see if you can retrospectively print one. Otherwise you will have to go to your bank.
I expect that they simply haven't reconciled their bank account.
ozwinner
16th June 2007, 05:15 PM
I sent them off the print out from the bank along with the attached letter and I invoiced them for my time when the engine blew up, hire vehicle, days lost, printing etc, it comes to $3600.
Al :)
dazzler
16th June 2007, 06:20 PM
That's fascinating, Al. Isn't it pathetic that an engine would blow spark plugs out if it's head in this day and age.
My sister and her Hubby have just been through a war of words with Toyota. Their 55,000K but two weeks out of warranty Camry's engine died because of oil sludge. It's a big problem in the US with Camrys. Run a search: "camry oil sludge".
Hey Russ
Did she have it serviced by toyota and if so did they do the engine oil flush each time. (drain oil, refill with flush oil, run then drain and refill with fresh stuff)
If they didnt do the oil flush she may have a case against them. :)
Harry72
16th June 2007, 10:34 PM
Oz you cant really blame Ford Australia for this, as Ford Credit is a different company and thats probably the answer you'll get about the "out of pocket"... they'll say go to Ford Aust(the ol' WGFYA trick)
Yep your right Ford credit only love you as you purchase a car... then they own yer ass(so they think)DAMHIKT.
Rossluck
17th June 2007, 08:21 AM
Hey Russ
Did she have it serviced by toyota and if so did they do the engine oil flush each time. (drain oil, refill with flush oil, run then drain and refill with fresh stuff)
If they didnt do the oil flush she may have a case against them. :)
Unfortunately, my brother in law is a mechanic and he did the services himself. Toyota agreed that he may be a good mechanic (he is), but that he isn't a registered service mechanic and if he had been he would have known about the flushing and so on. It's all over now. Toyota said "sorry, can't help you", and my BIL bought a second hand engine and put it in the car (and reconditioned the auto transmission while he was at it).
We have a Camry, and I for one didn't know about the oil flush thing. The big question is, why is it so essential? It's a little bit like Al's problem from what I can see. Why does a Ford motor in this day and age blow spark plugs out of it's head. Is the Ford company new to making engines?:rolleyes: And why do Camry's potentially have an oil slush problem if they aren't flushed?
woodbe
17th June 2007, 08:57 AM
I know a chauffeur driver in Melbourne who had a statesman with the big V8. It developed piston-slap, and Holden replaced the engine at 50k. He said it was a common problem...
I guess it's a risk with any mass produced item, but in the meantime:
Ford:
Fix Or Repair Daily
Found On Road, Dead.
Found On Rubbish Dump.
:)
Barry Hicks
17th June 2007, 10:34 AM
The old adage may be true -
If you can't afford a Dodge: Dodge a Ford.
Barry Hicks
dazzler
17th June 2007, 11:43 AM
Hey Russ
Yeah I agree. I'm a mechanic, well was 20 years ago, and have built a lot of race engines over the years for rally cars and never had a sludge problem.
The only way I learnt about the flush was when it was on the Toyota invoice for my wifes new Rav4 and I said "what the" and they said it was standard with all the toyota engines.
Beats me why the engines would do it. The current 4 cyl twin cam engines in the rav, camry, avensis etc are all descendants of the 4AGE twin cams that have a fantastic history and I cant remember oil sludging in them. Toyota 4cyl diesels absolutely :rolleyes: . The old 2L and 3L diesels would do the big end bearing if the oil change was neglected much at all.
I wonder if its the euro 2 and 3 regs that are somehow keeping the emissions in the engine and thats sludging them up.
Was it the 4cyl camry?
Rossluck
17th June 2007, 06:06 PM
Was it the 4cyl camry?
Yep, 2.4 litre. I also had truck with a 2L diesel in which the oil pump died and caused me all sorts of problems.
But this isn't an anti Toyota thing with me. I have enormous respect for their vehicles. It's just that quality seems to be regressing a bit with all of the manufacturers at the moment. Maybe it's the Koreans putting pressure on them.
dazzler
17th June 2007, 07:02 PM
Yep, 2.4 litre. I also had truck with a 2L diesel in which the oil pump died and caused me all sorts of problems.
But this isn't an anti Toyota thing with me. I have enormous respect for their vehicles. It's just that quality seems to be regressing a bit with all of the manufacturers at the moment. Maybe it's the Koreans putting pressure on them.
Ahhh so, you make cheep cheep or we nuke nuke :D
woodbe
17th June 2007, 07:14 PM
Toyota quality is very good, but their dealers are suspect just like any other car dealer.
I still remember a Toyota Service manager telling me that 'they all do that' as the gearbox crunched gears changing up to second gear. He quoted (then) $3500 to fix the gearbox and I made him look like an idiot by buying one from a wreck for $300 and making him fit it. *it was perfect* ;)
woodbe.
m2c1Iw
17th June 2007, 07:20 PM
Ahhh..... the old "they all do that". I prefer "never seen that before":D
Poppa
17th June 2007, 09:59 PM
I've had Toyotas that I've loved (and never had a serious mechanical issue with one of them). But I've now got a 2000 AUII Falcon, and I love this car. It is a very nice car to drive, goes brilliantly, and the servicing is cheap and fantastic at my local Ford dealer. I'm a Ford convert.
mixin
17th June 2007, 11:51 PM
I have a 2006 Camry V6 as a company car. While it is very reliable so far (only needing attention once apart from services) I am very disappointed in the absolutely terrible fit & finish of the overall car.
Parts of the dash don't line up, the radio sits out further on one side than the other, I had to bend the tops of the door frames in to lessen the wind noise (which is still there).
I cannot see how they can make a lexus out of effectively the same architecture & shared components, when a 10 year old VS commodore is a lot quiter to drive down the freeway.
On the subject of oil sludge, a while back we had a Wynns representative do a presentation at a car club meeting. He showed us photos of the "meatloaf" of oil cake/sludge that is common in ford transit van/trucks with a particular engine, and noted that it is becoming a huge worldwide problem. He described an oil flush product they sell, and gave us all a sample at the end.
I used the oil flush when I did the change in the car (5L Holden) and the oil pressure improved more than it normally does with the new oil in it). Since then I have done it twice more. I had the rocker covers off it a few weeks back to change the weepy gaskets, and they were nice & clean inside - all they had was that varnish coloured stain, and absolutely no sludge. I'm sold on it.
Iain
18th June 2007, 08:41 AM
What's it called???
Zed
18th June 2007, 01:18 PM
i remember reading someehere that fords credo is/was "we are a finance company that uses cars as a mechnism to get the repeated payments to happen"
mixin
19th June 2007, 12:37 AM
What's it called???
If that was aimed at me, then it's Wynns Oil Flush.
You put it in while it's warm, idle it for 15 minutes or so to circulate it, then drain the oil as normal.
Iain
19th June 2007, 09:21 AM
If that was aimed at me, then it's Wynns Oil Flush.
You put it in while it's warm, idle it for 15 minutes or so to circulate it, then drain the oil as normal.
It was aimed at you and thanks, may give it a try:2tsup:
Poppa
19th June 2007, 01:57 PM
My local Ford service department uses Wynns with every service unless you tell them not to. At my most recent service for example, they told me that they'd looked at the engine oil and it was starting to look dirty, so they did a complete flush. They rang me and advised of this before they did it to get my OK. This is the first service since I've been taking the vehicle there that they've suggested this. They normally use the Wynns oil and fuel additive products at every service. After my most recent service my 7 year old car drives like a new car. Maybe I'm just lucky and live near a Ford service department that offers unusually good service, but they've really made a convert of me.