Stalking the owners FB posts, they had around 16000 km on the odometer (10k miles) as of a 5 November post. I'd guess it was purchased and driven there, plus lots of long commutes to a grocery store maybe. Other info: Outer Banks, Lux package... stock wheels and tires (already had four flats due to rocky roads up there).Anyone else spend a couple minutes looking into Tuktoyaktuk. Sheeesh. It's on the edge of upper canada. While i call complete BS on the post, I have more questions about how he even got his bronco. I assume shipped on a boat, which must have been expensive as hell. Otherwise, he's like a 1,500 mile drive through the yukon to the nearest ford dealership in alaska, and would had to import. or it's like a 2,000 mile drive to alberta. He may win a prize for the most remotely located Bronco built thus far.
I was heading to the bank, pulled into a parking spot and noticed that part of my driver's side soft top side window was sticking out funny. So I got out to look at it and it was not secure. Somehow the flap popped out or someone tried to open it, I haven't touched the soft top since I got it and I've only had for about two weeks.Hmm, I can see how this happened even with the top closed, but I've experienced a couple of ways my Bronco wouldn't be entirely closed.
Right now, I'm having a cold weather electrical problem. If the vehicle has sat in the cold for a bit and I start it, for the first part, I get a number of alerts about blind spot detection with cross traffic, trailer brake, etc. The last time it happened, I was out with the family and friends and when we went out to go home, it pinged all the alerts, the heater didn't work, etc. This fixes itself after a moment, but every time it happens, the windows lose their training.
The first time, the passenger window went down a crack and my daughter actually asked me to roll up the window! I couldn't. The controls were inoperative. On other occasions, the windows fail to remember to roll down slightly and roll back up and so they close on the outside of the weather stripping.
I've learned the symptoms and workarounds, but instead of being a top problem, it could be random electrical weirdness like I've experienced. I don't facebook, but I'm curious whether that poster has experienced any electrical issues.
Mine, they've done the TSB on the electrical connector behind the glove box and now it's been referred to Ford engineers, who said, "It'll have to happen while it's in the shop for us to figure it out." It's in the body shop now to get all the dents and misalignments from the train ride here sorted out.
Or it could be the top got lifted by wind. Heck, I left a window cracked 1/8 inch in Wyoming one night and came out to a Tahoe full of snow drifts one time.
Good news, it's the most drama free vehicle I've ever driven on snow and ice in my life. And I garage, so I'll likely never know if the snow gets in the cab from a crosswind.
The windows were easily left open. No way that much snow can come in through a crack of the soft top. They’re trying to get something out of itI dunno. I'm calling BS on this one. I don't even see how this is possible unless a window was left down or the top was left unlatched.
What the owner said:
The snow is coming in where the soft top meets the frame. The driver side is facing westward. We had west wind gusts of 80+km/hr yesterday. What u see is the results. Everything was shut properly. I'm not going to spend 70g and leave windows slightly open in a forecasted blizzard.
It's a public group so the link should open the story.
LINK
Agreed.I'm in that Facebook group, and caught this picture this morning. I live in northern Wisconsin and have seen what happens in a hard driving snow storm when somebody leaves a window even cracked open. It looks a lot like this. I'm guessing the top was not secured in some fashion along the edges, and the driving wind blew it open and allowed snow in. Just being honest, I have not personally attempted to install or remove a soft top on a Bronco.
I will however say this: as I previous stated I live in northern Wisconsin. I refused to change my order to a soft top for reasons like what he experienced. This guy literally lives in the Arctic circle. You gotta want a Bronco real bad to change your order(which he states he did in his replies) to a soft top living in such a climate. My belief is he gets what he deserves for doing such a thing.
Doesnt care to be part of society, yet has FB in the middle of no damn where.Never thought i would say this, but after some Alaskan/Canadian and high snow belt people have chimed in, I am now thinking this is plausible. Even more so if maybe the top wasn't fully secured, as those people have attested that a simple slit could cause something like this in severe/extreme snowy whether.
The guy is basically a character on Life Below Zero lol. He doesnt even care to be part of society, so he's not really striking me as someone focused on self-attention by lying about this.
Well if you left the top open, there would be snow under the top when you close itOne of the first things I noticed. LOL
I feel like we have different soft tops. Mine has 4 buckles across the back and 3-4 on either side. Then the bottom is secured into the metal panels. The Velcro is just for sealing, not securing.As a soft top owner in New England I have already wondered about this. The soft-top is only velcro'd on the back portion where the removable side and back plastic windows are.
Sure the front leading edge is clamped down BUT the side sections where the soft-top frame meets the roof surround is not secure.
The soft-top frame is made of metal but there are no additional clamps to secure them onto the driver and passenger top rail. Crosswinds have already made their way in on numerous occasions so I'm sure snow will have no trouble coming in as well.