Thanks Scraze 66 for this information, much appreciated.Will be parked there until the recall gets issued.
Transport Canada Recall - 2024060 - GENERAL MOTORS - Canada.ca
recalls-rappels.canada.ca
I don't know if that is 100% correct regarding the 2 week hold. My car was built December 5th, window sticker issued December 7th, vehicle delivered to dealer December 11th, and in my garage on December 14th.When I did the plant tour last year the powers that be said that all cars that had cleared the production line were parked for two weeks in case of any recalls from parts suppliers. So a two week wait is normal. What is apparently going on now is the daytime/nighttime running lights that are not functioning properly. I would presume they are waiting on either a software update or an ambient light sensor. Daytime running lights are mandatory in Canada, If there are any issues they have to be cleared up before the car can enter Canada.
Just repeating what we were told. As cars come off the line there is a final inspector who drives it off the line on to some metal "V" on the floor to set the shock absorbers. However, if they have an issue with the "final" inspection it is driven off to a section right beside the line to see if the issue can be rectified. If not, then it goes to a nearby staging area for a more comprehensive mechanical inspection and hopefully rectification. At least once a day they will pull a car off after it has passed the :finals" and take it for a drive around the BG area to make sure all is OK.Ya, I've never heard of a 2 week wait for anything other than a recalls etc. Yes, some unique situations will cause cars to sit. Recalls, known issues, first cars of a generation off the ass'y line etc.
"That" I have heard, many times. It's just the 2 week mandatory hold I've never heard of as a normal procedure.Just repeating what we were told. As cars come off the line there is a final inspector who drives it off the line on to some metal "V" on the floor to set the shock absorbers. However, if they have an issue with the "final" inspection it is driven off to a section right beside the line to see if the issue can be rectified. If not, then it goes to a nearby staging area for a more comprehensive mechanical inspection and hopefully rectification. At least once a day they will pull a car off after it has passed the :finals" and take it for a drive around the BG area to make sure all is OK.
In theory it is supposed to be A1 when it gets delivered.
Holding all cars for 2 weeks after they are built 'in case' of a recall is absolutely bad information, especially 4 years in to a Model!!!! Once the car is built, and if there are 0 issues found after Final Inspection, car is shipped very quickly to its destination, quite often the next day or 2....Holding cars at the very start of a Major Model change is common for a couple weeks....2 main reasons - 1) Software problems are common at the start, so Reflashes are quite common, and easy to do when cars are still parked. 2) Inventory needs to build up prior to shipping so once shipping starts, all dealers can get a few cars at the same time......"That" I have heard, many times. It's just the 2 week mandatory hold I've never heard of as a normal procedure.
Mine was at the dealer within 2 weeks of 3800. And when I was tracking build dates, I kept as close as possible of course, my eye on these things.
Makes sense.Holding all cars for 2 weeks after they are built 'in case' of a recall is absolutely bad information, especially 4 years in to a Model!!!! Once the car is built, and if there are 0 issues found after Final Inspection, car is shipped very quickly to its destination, quite often the next day or 2....Holding cars at the very start of a Major Model change is common for a couple weeks....2 main reasons - 1) Software problems are common at the start, so Reflashes are quite common, and easy to do when cars are still parked. 2) Inventory needs to build up prior to shipping so once shipping starts, all dealers can get a few cars at the same time......
During my visit, there were 6 cars in the QC section at the end of line. For some reason they were all Z06. Probably can only hold 10-12 cars before they have to take them outside.Makes sense.
We were right at the end of the 2023 year model which was a Z06. It didn't get driven off the line as there was some issue with it. Amazing how the whole line then gets held up until the car gets moved to a repair area.
There were probably a couple of dozen C8's being held for problem solving. It could be anything such as a rattle or more serious. So those ones don't actually make it out of the plant until the problem is fixed. And if necessary they get torn apart to find the issue.
At any rate, the quality control impressed me. After all, Corvette does want to deliver a top notch vehicle to you.
It missed the plant by 100 miles south I believe.Didn't Kentucky get hit by damaging hail.....large stones? Maybe delays are hail related with the cars parked outside?
Yes and no.Didn't Kentucky get hit by damaging hail.....large stones? Maybe delays are hail related with the cars parked outside?
If you were there at the very beginning of a model year that might have been true. But it's definitely not true of normal production. Some of the tour guides like to sound like they know more than they do.When I did the plant tour last year the powers that be said that all cars that had cleared the production line were parked for two weeks in case of any recalls from parts suppliers. So a two week wait is normal. What is apparently going on now is the daytime/nighttime running lights that are not functioning properly. I would presume they are waiting on either a software update or an ambient light sensor. Daytime running lights are mandatory in Canada, If there are any issues they have to be cleared up before the car can enter Canada.
Thanks for the positive encouragement. Hopefully not this time. If that were the case I’m happy I haven’t paid yet. Lots of nice C8’s sitting on dealers lots at MSRP so at least you would avoid the shipping and prep time. C7’s would start to look attractive as well.Something similar happened to Ford a while back and they took 8 months to rectify.
If we are talking about the DRL recall, Over the C8 MY there has never been a hold like this for any length of time AFAIKThanks for the positive encouragement. Hopefully not this time. If that were the case I’m happy I haven’t paid yet. Lots of nice C8’s sitting on dealers lots at MSRP so at least you would avoid the shipping and prep time. C7’s would start to look attractive as well.