DukeCanBuildit
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Duke
- Joined
- Jul 27, 2020
- Threads
- 66
- Messages
- 9,643
- Reaction score
- 46,118
- Location
- Kitchener, Ontario
- Vehicle(s)
- 2019 XLT SuperCab - FTW!
- Occupation
- Retired (P/T) Caregiver (F/T)
- Vehicle Showcase
- 1
Aerostar AWD, huh?Hi Rick,
You are correct, a plant drive is randomly selected vehicle that the plant QC folks drive to ensure everything is correct or sometimes after a line problem was identified and the drive was to verify the correction was satisfactory...if anything is noted, it is put into the repair bays before shipping, so in a way it is a good deal if your vehicle had some mileage... I do not know current laws, but we were always told to keep any engineering drives under 50 miles and definitely below 125 miles as we then had to buy the vehicle and ship back to Dearborn. I think Plant QC drives did not have to document mileage below 50 miles, but we had a roll of stickers that indicated an engineering drive and that the warranty was extended by the mileage shown on the odometer. Again, if we found something, there was a plant QC review and then a repair. When I headed up Vehicle Launch for Ranger, we had to drive a set number of units...Something in order of 50 units for between major launchs and maybe double that for major launches.
Here is another backstory.
1990 Aerostar All Wheel Drive Launch...I was just NVH support but as I had struggled to get a handle on powertrain moan by developing a large brace between the transmission bellhousing and the transfer case. I was curious to see that powertrain install in the body, so some other members of the Launch Team joined me walking up the line to the point where the powertrain was installed. We were under strict orders to follow process anytime we were in the plant, and that was if we saw anything wrong or of concern, we were to notify plant personnel...line Foreman, QC rep or such. NEVER Take things into our own hands. On the way to the area, we cut through the body paint area. As the bodies came out of paint and a quick trip through some heat lamps, the body then headed around a corner and in to the paint oven..Prior to the oven, the rear hatch was secured at about a 45° angle by a plant installed bracket. Well...one of the brackets was not installed properly and the hatch went back up to its full open position which would trash the hatch in the paint oven.... One of the folks with me, (who will remain unidentified) shouted "I am on it!" and jumped into the Aerostar body and pulled the hatch down and secured the bracket to the hatch....And then he and the Aerostar body entered the paint oven. Yikes!!!! We had no idea of what would happen to this engineer.. Only thing was to alert the emergency response team and tell them what happened... We were so shocked none of us could remember the color of the body, so the team stationed themselves at the exit of the oven...It seemed like hours passed but finally the Aerostar popped out of the oven...fellow was helped out of the Aerostar body and whisked away on a stretcher on a golf cart to Plant Medical... He looked like a cooked goose. Fortunately this engineer was okay, shaken and dehydrated but not in need of transportation to a hospital.
The whole team caught hell from the plant manager...not a very pleasant experience... The plant had never before had something like this happen, at least as the folks around us could recall... Certainly a lesson learned by that engineer....
Best,
Phil Schilke
Ranger Vehicle Engineering
Ford Motor Co. Retired
Phil, did you ever work with or know an engineer named George (Geo) who was part of the original Aerostar launch around (I’m guessing here) 1984/5?
Sponsored