gonemad
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jul 24, 2024
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- fringes of RTP
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- ’25 JT Rubicon, '24 FLHP Road King police
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- retired headhunter
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- #1
...which I didn’t see till I had owned it a week or so while installing rock sliders under it.
I bought it new in July, 2024 from a local dealer here in central NC. It had been on their lot since delivery in January 2024, to that dealership per the window sticker. Part of those 90 miles was driving it over and back to their other store 15-20 miles away where it sat for a while. The remaining mileage on it was not enough to drive the truck to our coastal beaches (much less back). We had no snow or ice events that involved brine on the roads here that I recall in this part of the state this past winter.
After seeing the rust, I went to the dealership on a Sunday morning while they were closed and crawled under nearly every Gladiator on the lot with a bright flashlight, and they all looked nice and new, whereas the underside of mine looked older than the 2017 F150 with 110,000 miles I traded to them.
I took these pics as soon as I saw the rust, and figured I’d show them to the dealership when I go in for the first service, which hasn’t occurred yet. I did send the pics to the salesman, but his comment was “surface rust, blah, blah.” I otherwise love the JT and don't have intention of trying to give it back. I tried that once thirty years ago, and went to the mat with a dealer over another issue. They prevailed upon me to let them try to take care of it (not rust), and it turned out to be one of my favorite vehicles of all time 135,000 miles later, so I’m not giving up on this JT.
The only plausible theory I can come up with is it rode on an auto transport from Toledo when brand new in a 2024 winter snow event that coated the bottom side of the Jeep with salt or brine. Otherwise, I got nothing.
Thoughts?
Thanks in advance.
I bought it new in July, 2024 from a local dealer here in central NC. It had been on their lot since delivery in January 2024, to that dealership per the window sticker. Part of those 90 miles was driving it over and back to their other store 15-20 miles away where it sat for a while. The remaining mileage on it was not enough to drive the truck to our coastal beaches (much less back). We had no snow or ice events that involved brine on the roads here that I recall in this part of the state this past winter.
After seeing the rust, I went to the dealership on a Sunday morning while they were closed and crawled under nearly every Gladiator on the lot with a bright flashlight, and they all looked nice and new, whereas the underside of mine looked older than the 2017 F150 with 110,000 miles I traded to them.
I took these pics as soon as I saw the rust, and figured I’d show them to the dealership when I go in for the first service, which hasn’t occurred yet. I did send the pics to the salesman, but his comment was “surface rust, blah, blah.” I otherwise love the JT and don't have intention of trying to give it back. I tried that once thirty years ago, and went to the mat with a dealer over another issue. They prevailed upon me to let them try to take care of it (not rust), and it turned out to be one of my favorite vehicles of all time 135,000 miles later, so I’m not giving up on this JT.
The only plausible theory I can come up with is it rode on an auto transport from Toledo when brand new in a 2024 winter snow event that coated the bottom side of the Jeep with salt or brine. Otherwise, I got nothing.
Thoughts?
Thanks in advance.
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