We waited about two years for Ford to get the parts to replace the defective passenger side Takata air bag in my wife's 2007 Ford Edge. A couple of years later, Ford is now saying they'll also replace the the driver side airbag (not sure if this is also a gov-mandated recall), and will let us know when the parts come in. Ford offered to pay for a rental car while we waited for the passenger side fix; we declined. No such offer for the driver side recall, and the repair offer is said to cover vehicles "up to 15 years old". Not sure whether they'll fix it all if they don't fix it in the next 5 weeks before its 15th birthday.
Maybe. The transmission has been acting weird for a while. Fluid was black. Performance improved a good bit after I drained and added new fluid twice. (Draining by drain plug removes only 6 quarts, but it holds 11 quarts, so you can't get all the old fluid out.) But the fluid was still pretty black, so I drained and added 6 new quarts again (for the 3rd time) today. So the fluid should be about 84% new now.
Overall, the Ford Edge has been a pretty good car for her.
But our #3 and #4 have been driving Toyota Avalons (the best car in the world, IMO) for years, and a couple of months ago #5 got a brand new Toyota RAV4. When StraitWoman saw it, she said "I want a Toyota."
But the newer RAV4's with their inline 4-cylinder engines are too slow for her. A faster 2012 model with a V6 would work, but 2012's had the spare tire mounted on the rear door, which she doesn't like.
I can't stand all the safety and "driver assist" stuff they put on new cars today, or the big LCD computer screen in the middle of the dash, or the Automatic Stop-Stop, etc.
Let me know how that draining & refilling worked out. I've heard that's the worst thing you can do. I know how A/Ts work, the practical application physics are elusive.
(EdiT) I've heard that if you drain the grit & shit out, they won't work anymore. Scotty Kilmer even said that. Honestly, I don't know.
(Edit 2) I have no idea how you would drain the torque converter, TBH.
Yes, there is a school that says if the trans is already toast, and that contaminants in the fluid are what's keeping it going, then replacing the fluid with new could cause the transmission to slip more than with the old.
I don't doubt that could happen, but the likelihood seems pretty remote, especially with a transmission that isn't slipping, it just lurches sometimes going uphill and it wants to stick in a lower gear too long after a throttle-induced downshift. That's what ours was doing.
There's a guy on YouTube who professes to be a mechanic, and he has a 2007 Ford Edge just like my wife's. And he says that the 2007 Ford Edge LOVES clean transmission fluid.
After replacing 6 of 11 quarts twice (79% new fluid) the fluid was still pretty black. I suspect that is partly due to the new fluid's better detergent properties washing away some of the deposits.
Just replaced 6 of 11 quarts again (3rd time!, 91% new fluid). In a few weeks after it mixes well I'll pull the plug and drain an ounce or two and see if it looks red yet.
Looking at the older Toyota RAV4's with V6. When the light turns green, StraitWoman goes, and she needs to get to 60 in less than 7 seconds.