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Multiple RAM HD trucks suffer extensive transportation damage.....

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gsbrockman

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I can’t take credit for this video, but a guy over on CF posted it up a few hours ago.

Original count was 36, until another guy posted there were 13 more on the backside of the storage lot, a storage lot shared by the big three.

 
I bet they will be repaired and sold as a new vehicle when the work is finished. My brother-in-law use to work for Toyota automotive at a facility for the mid-west, that would repair new vehicles that were damage in transport. He repaired one vehicle that had the roof crushed by the car hauler while in transit. When he was done, all he used was a small tube (the size of a travel toothpaste tube) of lead. The vehicle was repaired in less than a week, repainted and sent to the dealer as new.
 
Not much left to some of these.

Screenshot_20210705-113125_Chrome.jpg
 
I bet they will be repaired and sold as a new vehicle when the work is finished. My brother-in-law use to work for Toyota automotive at a facility for the mid-west, that would repair new vehicles that were damage in transport. He repaired one vehicle that had the roof crushed by the car hauler while in transit. When he was done, all he used was a small tube (the size of a travel toothpaste tube) of lead. The vehicle was repaired in less than a week, repainted and sent to the dealer as new.
Absolutely ZERO chance of any of those being repaired and sold.
 
That maybe so, but who will know if they were damage in transit. Dealers will warranty anything that fails.

For the most part the damage appears to be sheetmetal and broken glass no frame damage!

I know this was done with heavy equipment that was damage in transit. The vehicle was repaired at a dealer or a repair facility but not at the factory since they were reported shipped. I now know for a fact that "ROPS" that were damage in transit were replaced and the tractor was sold as new.
 
You can not sell a that heavily damaged car as new, no matter how good the fix is.
A simple check of the paint thickness shows any repair in bright light. That doesn't work out.

If they are sold then like they are into export south America to be fixed there - without any liability issues.
 
That maybe so, but who will know if they were damage in transit. Dealers will warranty anything that fails.

For the most part the damage appears to be sheetmetal and broken glass no frame damage!

I know this was done with heavy equipment that was damage in transit. The vehicle was repaired at a dealer or a repair facility but not at the factory since they were reported shipped. I now know for a fact that "ROPS" that were damage in transit were replaced and the tractor was sold as new.
What are YOU smoking? :D
 
What are YOU smoking? :D

I am not smoking anything.

I just know how the manufactures of vehicles work. I spent 40 years in design and during that time with several machines being damage in transit over the years. My brother-in-law who worked for Toyota automotive for almost 20 years as a painter and body man. He worked at the factory mid-west repair facility. He told me more than once on how the automotive industry works (one of the dirty little secrets) of new vehicles being shipped. As long as their was no frame damage and the damage was under the salvage value of the vehicles they were repaired and sold as new. The vehicles were never tilted so, this could be done!

The Toyota facility had a state of the are paint both that all vehicles went thru after being shipped from the factory. Shipboard, rail and truck transport would do a lot of damage to the vehicles while in transit. So, every car and truck that Toyota built and shipped to the mid-west were repaired and repainted at this facility before being sent on to the dealer.
 
I am not smoking anything.

I just know how the manufactures of vehicles work. I spent 40 years in design and during that time with several machines being damage in transit over the years. My brother-in-law who worked for Toyota automotive for almost 20 years as a painter and body man. He worked at the factory mid-west repair facility. He told me more than once on how the automotive industry works (one of the dirty little secrets) of new vehicles being shipped. As long as their was no frame damage and the damage was under the salvage value of the vehicles they were repaired and sold as new. The vehicles were never tilted so, this could be done!

The Toyota facility had a state of the are paint both that all vehicles went thru after being shipped from the factory. Shipboard, rail and truck transport would do a lot of damage to the vehicles while in transit. So, every car and truck that Toyota built and shipped to the mid-west were repaired and repainted at this facility before being sent on to the dealer.

Makes me wonder if those were the "smokin' deals" leader ad vehicles...One only at this low-low price. Better hurry on down...Oh, sorry already sold!
 
I am not smoking anything.

I just know how the manufactures of vehicles work. I spent 40 years in design and during that time with several machines being damage in transit over the years. My brother-in-law who worked for Toyota automotive for almost 20 years as a painter and body man. He worked at the factory mid-west repair facility. He told me more than once on how the automotive industry works (one of the dirty little secrets) of new vehicles being shipped. As long as their was no frame damage and the damage was under the salvage value of the vehicles they were repaired and sold as new. The vehicles were never tilted so, this could be done!

The Toyota facility had a state of the are paint both that all vehicles went thru after being shipped from the factory. Shipboard, rail and truck transport would do a lot of damage to the vehicles while in transit. So, every car and truck that Toyota built and shipped to the mid-west were repaired and repainted at this facility before being sent on to the dealer.

Jim is correct, that is done. The vehicle at that point is not titled, simply has an MSO. When they are sold the titles are issued in that state and then it's the standard game that we all know.

I had a pickup that way, bought brand new off the lot from a dealer I know well and had bondo cracks develop around the back window....got smacked and was repaired at the factory is what we always figured....

It's also a matter of custody, was the damage done in the holding yard, done while loading, done after being loaded on the truck or railcar, done during delivery??

It switches at some point in that process to the "Transporter" and it's their problem when damage results.

Transportation damage to any of our inbound units is filed under warranty as "Transporter Damage"....anything from one of their drivers stepping inside of a polished aluminum dual and scratching the snot out of it to a wreck of three saddled up units inbound during a snowstorm. The "Transporter" came and fetched those and we always assumed that they were sold for salvage....
 
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