Mokume
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Jeff
- Joined
- Aug 18, 2019
- Threads
- 44
- Messages
- 1,753
- Reaction score
- 2,740
- Location
- Honolulu, Hawaii
- Vehicle(s)
- 2000 Ranger Supercab (sold 12/19) , 2002 Honda CR-V
- Occupation
- Retired Firefighter III, Honolulu Fire Department
I can relate to your statement concerning automakers delivering cars with missing pieces:"Chips" covers a lot of territory. There are probably hundreds of semiconductors in a modern vehicle. Some are commodity parts, some are specialized or even custom. The shortages are across the board: chips that you used to be able to buy off the shelf basically anywhere have disappeared, and the lead time for ordering a small run of a specialized chip has pushed into 2022 or later. Some manufacturers have responded to commodity chip shortages by simply redesigning their products to use whatever's available. Carmakers tend to not be that nimble, and the approvals to substitute components would probably take longer than the chip shortage. They can try to deliver cars with missing pieces. That might work if it's something like the radio that needs to be fixed later, probably doesn't work if it's the ABS or airbag controller. But if they go too far down that road the deferred cost of reimbursing dealer labor rates to finish every car they sell will kill them. The carmakers have got themselves into quite a pickle because most of them canceled orders when production slowed during covid, so they ended up at the back of the line when the put new orders in. And it's a long line. And they're in this weird place where they are dependent on semiconductors to make their product, and they're too big to be able to just buy odds and ends here and there, but they're not big enough consumers of semiconductors to make them a top customer of the chipmakers they way a tech company like apple or samsung is--would a chipmaker prioritize orders from apple (buying parts for 200+ million iphones a year) or ford (buying parts for a couple million vehicles a year)?
When I was much younger and worked as a mechanic at a Lincoln/Mercury dealer I was given a job involving a brand new '76 Cougar XR-7, the 351M shook so violently at idle that the hood would not stay raised. Diagnosis revealed that cyl. #7 was completely dead, no compression at all. Pulling the left bank head showed no piston nor connecting rod, they were never installed at all...I joked with the gang that the 7 in XR-7 must mean a 7 piston V8...lol
I've several horror stories concerning new cars, for another time
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