Goglio704 wrote:
This will be regarded as a vehicle disablement rather than a safety issue I'm afraid.
Remeber the $10 part in Ford cars of the late 80's and early 90's that was mounted on the radiator and caused the motor to die (at any speed) when it was overheated by the hot radiator? Many people in hilly parts of the country were losing power and rolling backwards down hills, people were stalling on interstates wtih no warning and unable to get theri car started again (until hours later when it cooled down - usually at the repair shot, the mechanics would turn the key and it'd start right up). Ford, of course, denied everything, an investigation from just a couple of hundred of complaints was opened and ultimately the largest recall in U.S. history was mandated. This was a disablement condition.
It's nice that you don't have the problem yourself, you got a good one. But many people do have the problem and, since none of us work for NHTSA, then none of us knows the criteria for prompting them to do an investigation beyond filing our complaints and telling our story. Their investigation, if they open one, will determine that. A disablement can definetly lead to safety issues.
If too few people, or nobody, complain, then the only definite thing here is that no action will be taken and no investigation will occur.
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'05 CRD, Midnight Blue. Every option. Nice ride, idles like a garbage truck
