Investigation opened into nearly 1.3 million Ford F-150 trucks over unexpected gear shifts

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is investigating nearly 1.3 million Ford F-150 pickup trucks in the United States.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is investigating nearly 1.3 million Ford F-150 pickup trucks in the United States. (Piroschka van de Wouw, Reuters)


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is investigating 1.3 million Ford F-150 trucks for unexpected downshifts.
  • Complaints involve sudden transmission changes causing rapid deceleration and rear wheel lock-up.

WASHINGTON — The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is investigating nearly 1.3 million Ford F-150 pickup trucks in the United States over reports of an unexpected gear downshift accompanied by a temporary rear wheel lock-up.

The safety administration said Monday it is opening a preliminary evaluation into some Ford F-150 pickup trucks from the 2015 to 2017 model years after receiving complaints from 138 consumers.

Complaints alleged unexpected transmission downshifts to lower gears while traveling at highway speeds without warning or driver input, followed by the vehicle rapidly decelerating.

A Ford spokesperson said Monday the automaker is "working with NHTSA to support its investigation" and said it is related to vehicles with six-speed transmissions.

The safety administration is opening a preliminary evaluation into the issue and then must decide whether to update the probe to an engineering analysis before it could seek to require a recall.

A 2023 complaint from an owner in Ohio of a 2016 F-150 said that while driving on the highway at 70 mph "the truck automatically shifted from sixth gear to first gear nearly throwing me through the windshield."

Many owners reported long waits to get replacement parts.

Some complaints said the vehicle's rear wheels would lock temporarily, seize or skid during the downshift, leading to loss of control. This could lead to an increased risk of a crash, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said. The agency said no crashes or fires had been reported.

This is the latest in a series of safety administration investigations into F-150 unexpected downshifting.

In June, Ford recalled 668,000 2014 model year F-150 trucks over reports of unexpected downshifts into the first gear causing a loss of driver control or rear-wheel lockup.

It was the latest Ford recall over the issue since 2016 and came after the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration in March 2023 opened an investigation into whether 2014 model trucks needed to be recalled for the issue.

Ford in 2016 recalled 153,000 2011-2012 Ford F-150 vehicles equipped with six-speed automatic transmissions to address the downshift issue.

The safety administration opened a probe into the issue in December 2017 and in 2019 Ford expanded its recall to cover 1.48 million F-150 trucks in North America, including 2013 models. Ford later recalled 107,000 2013 F-150 vehicles due to an issue with the fix.

In November 2024, Ford agreed to a $165 million civil penalty after the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration found the automaker failed to recall vehicles with defective rearview cameras in a timely manner.

Contributing: Aishwarya Jain and Kanjyik Ghosh

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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