Mikknj
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Mikk
- Joined
- Jun 15, 2023
- Threads
- 4
- Messages
- 171
- Reaction score
- 104
- Location
- New Jersey
- Vehicle(s)
- 2024 Ranger XLT Cactus Grey
Of course this is true. There's no denying any of that..gonna have to disagree with your speculation here and suggest you consider another explanation. All major manufacturers use a system called JIT or lean manufacturing, the basis of which is to not collect all components to build with ahead of time. Instead, they rely exclusively on their selected and preferred vendors and suppliers to promise delivery dates and actually deliver on time so the factories can build product. The supply constraints are largely out of Ford's control here, but rather have to do with vendors NOT delivering on time. This scrambles all scheduling and ability to smoothly build products. Imagine if even 3 of the suppliers (out of literally thousands) miss their promised delivery date and the schedulers and purchasing have to jump into action real-time and try to find out what else they can build and shuffle production runs to keep the line moving. It's a bit like the old Whack-a-mole game where a problem pops up, they hammer it down and another mole pops up, and another, and another...
There is still the opportunity for a automaker to choose when to start production.
No one said anything shady was going on.
I believe market conditions have as much to do with the start date as supply disruptions.
Sponsored