Wouldn't it make sense to take the truck to someone who is intimately familiar with that brand and model?
I'm a mechanic. A customer showed up with a 2 year old truck that he'd just bought, and wanted us to check it out before it hit the road. I wish so much that he'd brought it to us BEFORE the sale.
The truck had been in a significant accident. It was fixed good enough that the damage wasn't evident without lots of poking around. I specialize in poking around though. I think the right front wheel hit something hard enough to break a leaf spring, sending the tire through the fender, into the DEF tank, and into the aftertreatment system. Every bracket in the aftertreatment system is bent. The DEF tank brackets are all new, but either installed badly or the frame is twisted. I can tell that the frame is a little bent, but I can't see if there's a twist. In any case, it's off just enough for the DEF gauge to be inaccurate. The right front fender has been repaired, there's white overspray on some hardware and other hardware is missing. Clips that secure wiring harness were ripped off. These can be removed without destroying them if you take two extra seconds to do it correctly. Finally there's one new leaf spring and new u-bolts.
The truck only has 80k on it, so everything looks sort of new anyway, so it's hard to tell the new parts from the almost new parts.
Luckily for this guy, everything in the aftertreatment system works correctly, and it seems to drive fine. I'm trying to chase down a couple of weird noises without success, though.
Wouldn't you rather figure all this stuff out before you handed someone money?
Make the sale of a truck contingent on it going to a mechanic and getting some sort of passing bill of health beforehand. And if the price is too good to be true, it probably is.
I'm a mechanic. A customer showed up with a 2 year old truck that he'd just bought, and wanted us to check it out before it hit the road. I wish so much that he'd brought it to us BEFORE the sale.
The truck had been in a significant accident. It was fixed good enough that the damage wasn't evident without lots of poking around. I specialize in poking around though. I think the right front wheel hit something hard enough to break a leaf spring, sending the tire through the fender, into the DEF tank, and into the aftertreatment system. Every bracket in the aftertreatment system is bent. The DEF tank brackets are all new, but either installed badly or the frame is twisted. I can tell that the frame is a little bent, but I can't see if there's a twist. In any case, it's off just enough for the DEF gauge to be inaccurate. The right front fender has been repaired, there's white overspray on some hardware and other hardware is missing. Clips that secure wiring harness were ripped off. These can be removed without destroying them if you take two extra seconds to do it correctly. Finally there's one new leaf spring and new u-bolts.
The truck only has 80k on it, so everything looks sort of new anyway, so it's hard to tell the new parts from the almost new parts.
Luckily for this guy, everything in the aftertreatment system works correctly, and it seems to drive fine. I'm trying to chase down a couple of weird noises without success, though.
Wouldn't you rather figure all this stuff out before you handed someone money?
Make the sale of a truck contingent on it going to a mechanic and getting some sort of passing bill of health beforehand. And if the price is too good to be true, it probably is.