Ruger
FRF Addict
WATCH 'EM! I recently got a check engine light that I couldn't reset, so I took it to the Ford dealership from whom I bought the Raptor. As I anticipated, the problem was an O2 sensor. It was repaired under warranty at no charge to me. Problem solved, right?
NO.
The service technician wrote on my service record, "IDS Flagged due to modifications dealing with axel ratio, tire size, wheels. No related modifications noticed during inspection."
The tires are the exact same size as the factory BFGs, the wheels are the factory wheels that were delivered on the truck, and I have made no gearing changes. At best those two sentences are contradictory. At worst, my factory warranty is over because the guy can't write. That first sentence is a stand-alone thought. That's what periods are for. With the modifier "related" in the second sentence, the two sentences say that I've made warranty killing modifications to my truck, but that they do not have anything to do with the other (O2 sensor) code.
They've promised to alter the service record and send me a copy as proof, but the guy who called me actually wanted to argue about the meaning of what the technician wrote. It ought to be obvious that if you're in a service industry you do not call a client and argue with him about how to read English.
I need another cheap beer.
NO.
The service technician wrote on my service record, "IDS Flagged due to modifications dealing with axel ratio, tire size, wheels. No related modifications noticed during inspection."
The tires are the exact same size as the factory BFGs, the wheels are the factory wheels that were delivered on the truck, and I have made no gearing changes. At best those two sentences are contradictory. At worst, my factory warranty is over because the guy can't write. That first sentence is a stand-alone thought. That's what periods are for. With the modifier "related" in the second sentence, the two sentences say that I've made warranty killing modifications to my truck, but that they do not have anything to do with the other (O2 sensor) code.
They've promised to alter the service record and send me a copy as proof, but the guy who called me actually wanted to argue about the meaning of what the technician wrote. It ought to be obvious that if you're in a service industry you do not call a client and argue with him about how to read English.
I need another cheap beer.
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