Ford Fixing MIA Quality Control, ASAP

Matthew Guy
by Matthew Guy

Anyone blessed with the gift of reading comprehension has noticed an influx of stories about Ford and its recent quality control issues. Top brass Jim Farley is on record lamenting the problems and pledging to turn things around in this area. One of the first out of the gate with a quality control (QC) overhaul? The brand’s important (and profitable) new Super Duty.

In the olden, olden, olden days of vehicle production, it wasn’t uncommon for manufacturing and QC managers to be at loggerheads; there was more than one occasion in which meeting build targets took precedence over, y’know, actually getting things right. Those days are (mostly) gone – but it seems the crew at Ford’s truck plant in Kentucky are taking an especially hard look at quality control, where they’re willing to shut down the line to fix product issues.


One would think it is common sense to not let vehicles escape the factory with known problems, but it not unheard of for managers to permit the line to continue with an intent of addressing quality snags after the fact. This permits the plant to ‘make its numbers’ while theoretically repairing any glitches before the rigs make it into the hands of paying customers.


But with the Blue Oval putting a renewed focus on quality, managers at the Kentucky Truck Plant are said to have stopped production for up to three days earlier this year in order to address defective parts which were discovered when assemblers began hammering together the new Super Duty. Given that shutdown costs are generally calculated in the millions, this is no small deal.


Know what else is measured in huge numbers? Recall costs. Ford apparently spent over $4 billion (with a ‘b’) on warranty claims last year – which is at least one metric in which they beat General Motors, though probably not a crown they desired to earn. Investing big bucks to catch quality problems on the assembly line will likely pay off in the long run, just like doing preventative maintenance on yer car may avoid a hefty repair bill after the timing belt snaps and turns the engine’s valves into Cheez Doodles.


On tap at the Kentucky plant to help with this QC project are hundreds of new quality inspectors, cameras which feed images showing if electrical connectors are properly installed, and quality control command centres with displays that show data from assembly stations. Ford says almost 30,000 copies of the new Super Duty were test driven on validation loops, far more than the usual handful plucked randomly from the assembly line. The company hopes to use these lessons and methods at other plants. 


The timing of this news is probably not an accident. Ford is reporting its Q1 results tomorrow, suggesting the company wants investors to know it is making strides on quality instead of just mouthing a few platitudes.


[Image: Ford]


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Matthew Guy
Matthew Guy

Matthew buys, sells, fixes, & races cars. As a human index of auto & auction knowledge, he is fond of making money and offering loud opinions.

More by Matthew Guy

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  • ClipTheApex ClipTheApex on May 03, 2023

    I've had mixed issues with FoMoCo products. Loved my 400hp Lincoln MkZ, but currently have a company car (2022 Explorer). The 4 cyl has the grunt to move it, but Ford always tunes the transmissions to upshift ASAP. Making the 4 cyl try to lug a huge vehicle at the bottom end of the torque curve. You gotta nail it to get it to move, so it then downshift from 7th or 8th to 3rd, throwing you back in your seat. It's not so much a quality issue as we're discussing here, but a gripe I have about Ford noodling their tuning for EPA ratings and not driveability. Couple that with their low-rent interior (flexible plastic panels anyone?) makes the Explorer a miserable experience. We laughingly call this Explorer the "penalty box" when deciding which car to drive.

  • Art Vandelay Art Vandelay on May 08, 2023

    @EBFlex is a pole smoker. He puffs peters

  • Mike-NB2 This is a mostly uninformed vote, but I'll go with the Mazda 3 too.I haven't driven a new Civic, so I can't say anything about it, but two weeks ago I had a 2023 Corolla as a rental. While I can understand why so many people buy these, I was surprised at how bad the CVT is. Many rentals I've driven have a CVT and while I know it has one and can tell, they aren't usually too bad. I'd never own a car with a CVT, but I can live with one as a rental. But the Corolla's CVT was terrible. It was like it screamed "CVT!" the whole time. On the highway with cruise control on, I could feel it adjusting to track the set speed. Passing on the highway (two-lane) was risky. The engine isn't under-powered, but the CVT makes it seem that way.A minor complaint is about the steering. It's waaaay over-assisted. At low speeds, it's like a 70s LTD with one-finger effort. Maybe that's deliberate though, given the Corolla's demographic.
  • Mike-NB2 2019 Ranger - 30,000 miles / 50,000 km. Nothing but oil changes. Original tires are being replaced a week from Wednesday. (Not all that mileage is on the original A/S tires. I put dedicated winter rims/tires on it every winter.)2024 - Golf R - 1700 miles / 2800 km. Not really broken in yet. Nothing but gas in the tank.
  • SaulTigh I've got a 2014 F150 with 87K on the clock and have spent exactly $4,180.77 in maintenance and repairs in that time. That's pretty hard to beat.Hard to say on my 2019 Mercedes, because I prepaid for three years of service (B,A,B) and am getting the last of those at the end of the month. Did just drop $1,700 on new Michelins for it at Tire Rack. Tires for the F150 late last year were under $700, so I'd say the Benz is roughly 2 to 3 times as pricy for anything over the Ford.I have the F150 serviced at a large independent shop, the Benz at the dealership.
  • Bike Rather have a union negotiating my pay rises with inflation at the moment.
  • Bike Poor Redapple won't be sitting down for a while after opening that can of Whiparse
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