So this is why many of us with early builds were held up? Maybe partially anyway. Ours were done/in-work/under final testing while this was discovered?My understanding is that Ford cannot deliver any of the affected new vehicles until the recall repair is applied. If Ford has not already started that process, my fear is that it will be a while before trucks are shipped. Hopefully, the delay many of us have experienced is the software error and the time needed to apply the software update.
Sounds like Volvo with the indirect sensors that are based on tire rotation. And guess what — it does the job effectively even though you don’t know your precise tire pressure. What did we do before TPMS? We used tire guages.My winter wheels on most of the cars do not even have tpms sensors. Well, up until very recently. One car has new take off wheels for winter that came with sensors, other car has indirect tpms (uses abs sensors to find a wheel spinning at the wrong speed in comparison to the others), third car has no sensors and five cars prior to that had no sensors, just a warning light all winter. There should be a different name for recalls that can be fixed with a software update vs real hardware changes. This is as close to a nothing as you can get without it being nothing.
The report/article does say customers who don't want/rush to get this update will get it OTA in 30 days. Not sure why they'd be withholding deliveries or shipments, if this is the only issue, given that.The cause of the safety defect is immaterial to whether it justifies a recall or not. It can be either software or hardware. Tesla has had many recalls that they fix (or cause) by software, such as the "boombox feature:
https://www.consumerreports.org/car...oombox-feature-pedestrian-safety-a7645379043/
More info on recalls:
https://www.nhtsa.gov/sites/nhtsa.gov/files/documents/14218-mvsdefectsandrecalls_041619-v2-tag.pdf
It's too bad the fix requires hands-on labor and can't just be pushed out to the fleet via an OTA update. I wonder what Ford's relationship with their dealers is and where the point of no return is. Can they ship the truck from the factory with a known defect and just ask the dealer to fix it before delivering to a customer? Having the dealer fix it is far more efficient from a logistics standpoint if the truck has otherwise passed factory QA, especially for a software fix, but dealers may still balk at having to perform a known recall on a vehicle that hasn't yet been shipped to them.
it IS an OTA updateThe cause of the safety defect is immaterial to whether it justifies a recall or not. It can be either software or hardware. Tesla has had many recalls that they fix (or cause) by software, such as the "boombox feature:
https://www.consumerreports.org/car...oombox-feature-pedestrian-safety-a7645379043/
More info on recalls:
https://www.nhtsa.gov/sites/nhtsa.gov/files/documents/14218-mvsdefectsandrecalls_041619-v2-tag.pdf
It's too bad the fix requires hands-on labor and can't just be pushed out to the fleet via an OTA update. I wonder what Ford's relationship with their dealers is and where the point of no return is. Can they ship the truck from the factory with a known defect and just ask the dealer to fix it before delivering to a customer? Having the dealer fix it is far more efficient from a logistics standpoint if the truck has otherwise passed factory QA, especially for a software fix, but dealers may still balk at having to perform a known recall on a vehicle that hasn't yet been shipped to them.
It doesn't sound like there is any problem with TPMS. TPMS are still reporting the correct pressure. It's the software that issues the warning when pressure is too low. Presumably, you should notice low pressure long before it becomes dangerous. On my MME, I am experiencing a super slow leak (it loses 5 PSI over the course of a month). Since tire place hasn't been able to find it, I just use a compressor to refill it.For incorrect tire pressure monitor. Module and/or software update from dealer.
‘Not an earthshaking development.
And by regular basis, we mean we eyeballed it and went…hmm. Looks kind of flat. Then pulled out the stick to confirm.It doesn't sound like there is any problem with TPMS. TPMS are still reporting the correct pressure. It's the software that issues the warning when pressure is too low. Presumably, you should notice low pressure long before it becomes dangerous. On my MME, I am experiencing a super slow leak (it loses 5 PSI over the course of a month). Since tire place hasn't been able to find it, I just use a compressor to refill it.
Most of us remember life before TPMS when most of us checked the tire on a regular basis.
Or even if it doesn't look flat, check it every 3-4 weeks. Or if the system actually displays individual tire pressure, just look at that once in a while. Not really that hard.And by regular basis, we mean we eyeballed it and went…hmm. Looks kind of flat. Then pulled out the stick to confirm.
My understanding is that it is illegal for a new car dealer to sell a new motor vehicle that is under recall.The report/article does say customers who don't want/rush to get this update will get it OTA in 30 days. Not sure why they'd be withholding deliveries or shipments, if this is the only issue, given that.
I received 5 Rangers for courtesy delivery back in September-October last year. There was a stop-sale recall with no remedy available on them. They sat in my back lot for 6 MONTHS before we got them fixed and passed onto their customers back in April.The cause of the safety defect is immaterial to whether it justifies a recall or not. It can be either software or hardware. Tesla has had many recalls that they fix (or cause) by software, such as the "boombox feature:
https://www.consumerreports.org/car...oombox-feature-pedestrian-safety-a7645379043/
More info on recalls:
https://www.nhtsa.gov/sites/nhtsa.gov/files/documents/14218-mvsdefectsandrecalls_041619-v2-tag.pdf
It's too bad the fix requires hands-on labor and can't just be pushed out to the fleet via an OTA update. I wonder what Ford's relationship with their dealers is and where the point of no return is. Can they ship the truck from the factory with a known defect and just ask the dealer to fix it before delivering to a customer? Having the dealer fix it is far more efficient from a logistics standpoint if the truck has otherwise passed factory QA, especially for a software fix, but dealers may still balk at having to perform a known recall on a vehicle that hasn't yet been shipped to them.
I do not think that dealers will care since they are paid to perform recalls and warranty work.The cause of the safety defect is immaterial to whether it justifies a recall or not. It can be either software or hardware. Tesla has had many recalls that they fix (or cause) by software, such as the "boombox feature:
https://www.consumerreports.org/car...oombox-feature-pedestrian-safety-a7645379043/
More info on recalls:
https://www.nhtsa.gov/sites/nhtsa.gov/files/documents/14218-mvsdefectsandrecalls_041619-v2-tag.pdf
It's too bad the fix requires hands-on labor and can't just be pushed out to the fleet via an OTA update. I wonder what Ford's relationship with their dealers is and where the point of no return is. Can they ship the truck from the factory with a known defect and just ask the dealer to fix it before delivering to a customer? Having the dealer fix it is far more efficient from a logistics standpoint if the truck has otherwise passed factory QA, especially for a software fix, but dealers may still balk at having to perform a known recall on a vehicle that hasn't yet been shipped to them.