โJan-15-2019 09:17 PM
โDec-27-2019 05:39 AM
โDec-21-2019 08:21 AM
mich800 wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:disappointed_owner wrote:
Anyone with a 2019 Ram 3500 Cummins have a fuel system failure?
My 2019 Ram with 245 miles experienced what the mechanic stated coded as a catastrophic failure.
Was told that fix is likely a new motor from the assembly line and perhaps up to two weeks before I get my truck back.
Would like to know if I'm the unlucky one or if others have experienced this same problem.
I suggest you post a new thread with all the FACTS you can list.
So their question in a topic titled "2019 Ram HD" should start a new thread but table saws are on topic?
โDec-21-2019 07:44 AM
Cummins12V98 wrote:disappointed_owner wrote:
Anyone with a 2019 Ram 3500 Cummins have a fuel system failure?
My 2019 Ram with 245 miles experienced what the mechanic stated coded as a catastrophic failure.
Was told that fix is likely a new motor from the assembly line and perhaps up to two weeks before I get my truck back.
Would like to know if I'm the unlucky one or if others have experienced this same problem.
I suggest you post a new thread with all the FACTS you can list.
โDec-21-2019 06:59 AM
disappointed_owner wrote:
Anyone with a 2019 Ram 3500 Cummins have a fuel system failure?
My 2019 Ram with 245 miles experienced what the mechanic stated coded as a catastrophic failure.
Was told that fix is likely a new motor from the assembly line and perhaps up to two weeks before I get my truck back.
Would like to know if I'm the unlucky one or if others have experienced this same problem.
โDec-21-2019 06:25 AM
โJan-24-2019 03:28 AM
โJan-23-2019 09:03 PM
โJan-23-2019 11:02 AM
โJan-23-2019 10:49 AM
Cummins12V98 wrote:
"The lead in the paint on the pencil triggered the stop."
Was this pencil from the dark ages? There is no "lead" in the paint or in the lead of the pencil.
Something does not sound right. Sure he did NOT touch the blade? I am betting he touched the blade.
โJan-23-2019 08:26 AM
โJan-23-2019 07:02 AM
blofgren wrote:Me Again wrote:BigToe wrote:
1. Bosch cleverly invented the use of automotive air bag pre charged gas cartridges to stop the motion of table saw blades if an operator's hand made contact with the blade. Bosch's design was actually preferable to the competitor's blade stopping technology which destroyed the teeth of the saw blade in order to stop it. Bosch's air bag cartridge design saved the blade, and saved the fingers.
The problem was, the flesh detection technology that Bosch utilized to sense when the fingers were about to be cut was already patented by the competitor, called Saw Stop, which introduced the entire concept of safer table saws to market. Bosch built upon that idea, and introduced an improvement to the blade braking aspect, but Bosch refused to license the flesh sensing aspect from Saw Stop.
I was the monitor in our snowbird park's wood shop when one of the other monitors trip the Saw Stop. Sounded like a shotgun was fired. I hung the blade and stop module from the beam above the saw stuck together. It is a very nice saw. We have it built into a table big enough to rip a 4x8 sheet of plywood without needing some to catch the pieces.
He was cutting small pieces of wood for wooden toy and used a carpenter's pencil to hold the small piece to the saw fence as he pushed it threw. The lead in the paint on the pencil triggered the stop.
Chris
Very interesting!
โJan-22-2019 08:42 PM
BigToe wrote:
Yes, Ricatic's experience still reverberates in my mind every time I think about new Fords as well. And there are several other stories and story tellers. The ones that stick in the mind most are the Saul of Tarsus turned Paul the Apostle type of about faces, where the ardent advocates of Ford diesels, who boasted of never having a problem, suddenly get a problem, and don't get any assistance, even when still under warranty. Hell hath no fury like a fanboi scorned.
All brands can occasionally have problems, and all corporations can occasionally demonstrate some resistance to honoring their warranty. But I've read more stories about Ford denying warranty on Ford diesel trucks, particularly with the 6.7L engine, and particularly the fuel system of that engine, than any other corporate entity denying warranty for any other brand of product.
I've purchased more Ford vehicles than any other brand, btw, and currently own seven Fords (some are business vehicles). So my observation above is not biased by a predilection toward, or preference for, a competing brand. It is simply a concern about how Ford is treating customers with CP4.x fuel system failures. I feel fortunate not to be one of them.
โJan-22-2019 08:42 PM
BigToe wrote:
Yes, Ricatic's experience still reverberates in my mind every time I think about new Fords as well. And there are several other stories and story tellers. The ones that stick in the mind most are the Saul of Tarsus turned Paul the Apostle type of about faces, where the ardent advocates of Ford diesels, who boasted of never having a problem, suddenly get a problem, and don't get any assistance, even when still under warranty. Hell hath no fury like a fanboi scorned.
All brands can occasionally have problems, and all corporations can occasionally demonstrate some resistance to honoring their warranty. But I've read more stories about Ford denying warranty on Ford diesel trucks, particularly with the 6.7L engine, and particularly the fuel system of that engine, than any other corporate entity denying warranty for any other brand of product.
I've purchased more Ford vehicles than any other brand, btw, and currently own seven Fords (some are business vehicles). So my observation above is not biased by a predilection toward, or preference for, a competing brand. It is simply a concern about how Ford is treating customers with CP4.x fuel system failures. I feel fortunate not to be one of them.
โJan-22-2019 08:38 PM
BigToe wrote:
Yes, Ricatic's experience still reverberates in my mind every time I think about new Fords as well. And there are several other stories and story tellers. The ones that stick in the mind most are the Saul of Tarsus turned Paul the Apostle type of about faces, where the ardent advocates of Ford diesels, who boasted of never having a problem, suddenly get a problem, and don't get any assistance, even when still under warranty. Hell hath no fury like a fanboi scorned.
All brands can occasionally have problems, and all corporations can occasionally demonstrate some resistance to honoring their warranty. But I've read more stories about Ford denying warranty on Ford diesel trucks, particularly with the 6.7L engine, and particularly the fuel system of that engine, than any other corporate entity denying warranty for any other brand of product.
I've purchased more Ford vehicles than any other brand, btw, and currently own seven Fords (some are business vehicles). So my observation above is not biased by a predilection toward, or preference for, a competing brand. It is simply a concern about how Ford is treating customers with CP4.x fuel system failures. I feel fortunate not to be one of them.