Mach-Lee
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Lee
- Joined
- Jul 16, 2021
- Threads
- 262
- Messages
- 11,344
- Reaction score
- 24,965
- Location
- Wisconsin
- Vehicles
- 2022 Mach-E Premium AWD
- Occupation
- Sci/Eng
The worst part is the waiting, all the chip delays, and seeing other people that ordered at the same time get their car many (up to 8 for some?) months before you do (understand that Ford's system is anything but "first come first serve"). Or having your built car stuck in a chip hold or rail yard somewhere for 3+ months when no one can provide any additional information the whole time. Expect a poor customer service experience, no one will know anything or will make up lies if you ask. Calling or messaging Ford won't get you anywhere. It can be stressful wondering if it will ever come or what shenanigans your dealer will try to pull on you when it finally comes time to buy it. Tweeting Ford management, hoping they see it, and praying for a response in time may be necessary to resolve greedy dealer issues. Your finance guy won't know how to do Ford Options until you can get them in contact with their regional rep for help. Some of us have been waiting almost a whole year, many months longer than anticipated. Your car will have BlueCruise, and OTA updates will hopefully be working by the time you get yours, so you fortunately miss that drama. Plan on it taking up to a year for delivery, and possibly missing out on the tax rebate for 2022 if it's not delivered before the end of the year. Features you ordered may also be removed with little or no warning to you.I ordered a Premium in 1/14/22 and I’m seeing so many negative posts. I’m I making a mistake in buying the Mach E.
Once you get the car it's pretty good and is fun to drive, but you'll have to get used to some odd software bugs, glitches with PAAK, and lack of heat on cold winter days in the northern US and Canada. Understand Ford is very slow/bad at software releases, so expect upwards of 6 months before fixes for even simple issues are released. Getting service at a dealer is also frustrating because of many incompetent service managers and techs (some of which resent EVs) that may not have the proper training or tools to work on your Mach-E even though they work at an EV-certified dealer. You may be turned away from dealer appointments because the service manager didn't understand the nature of the repairs the first time, so 2-3 appointments may be required to solve an issue. If you have a major issue (which is rare, but happens), expect to be without your car for 2-8 weeks (rental coverage is another issue). The long wait is for parts to be procured and delivered (perhaps diverted from the factory), for special EV service tools to arrive, or for special Ford service engineers to arrive to show the dealer mechanics how to work on your car. Last, in some cases you'll have to bring your car to another EV-certified dealer after it's determined the first EV-certified dealer didn't have the required training or tools to do EV repairs.
The car itself is great, but actually getting it and dealing with the abysmal current state of the Ford ecosystem (and the car market in general) can be extremely frustrating and stressful. Other brands may offer a better buying and service experience, although these issues aren't exclusive to Ford. Ford just seems to have the most problems right now all things combined. Believe it or not I've been a lifelong Ford fan, it's been hard to watch the decline in the past few years. A lot of these problems weren't known yet when I ordered, other than the estimated wait time back then (only 4-6 months, ha) I was blissfully ignorant about the extent of the dysfunction.
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