On the surface this appears to be a straight out dealer upfit program not a Ford Motor Company sponsored project. It would be interesting to know how Grand Prairie Ford was able to recertify the GVWR to 22,500 (or is it only the axles rated at 22,500 lbs. while the chassis is still rated at 19,500?) dual brake calipers, lighting, emissions certification for the H&S Engine Mgmt Tuner and noise standards for on-road use. The tires alone would most likely exceed FMVSS noise standards for new on-road vehicles. Adding a tuner will change the already difficult to meet diesel engine emissions standards. Typically when an upfitter adds weight during body upfits (think tow trucks, etc), 4x4 conversions (Monroe), etc….the new added weight takes away from the GVWR, not added too…even if the axles/brakes exceed what the manfacturered originally certified for the vehicle.
All of the above could be upfitted easily for off-road only vehicles, or a vehicle sold as “used” vehicle. On-road, new vehicles become very difficult to certify with this level of upfit to chassis systems. Either this truck has had millions in development with independent engineering firm like Roush Engineering services in Detroit which the cost of engineering and durability testing alone would far exceed what an independent dealership would typically invest for their own sponsored program. Or it is still certified as a stock 19,500 F550 on paper which could be an issue if something where to go badly where an accident or something catastrophic could be circled back to the upfit. Getting warranty could be a challenge as well.
If not a FoMoCo sponsored program, the new chassis warranty maybe a challenge to actually get warranty work done outside of the dealer that performed the upfit. Getting warranty work done in Grand Prairie would be no problem. Take this vehicle into a Ford store in Mooseballs, MT with a smoked up transmission, broken leaf spring hanger, etc and see what happens. GPF is a well-known reputable dealer in TX so one could rest assure things would get worked out in the end but don’t expect warranty work on a truck like this to go as smoothly as getting an A/C compressor warrantied on a Fusion. I live these types of truck issues every day for my job and manufacturers and OEM dealers get a bad rap for upfitter changes to the chassis systems.
This is a great severe duty upfit for off-road applications (meaning non-licenced off-road…mining, wells), military, municipality, fire & rescue where the vehicles are licensed differently and owner expectations are different than a retail type customer. If this truck is actually recertified for on-road (with the chassis changes) that is impressive and shows major dedication from the said dealer. Not trying to blow holes in GPF, just prospective owners of something like this need to know exactly what they are getting into for 100,000. A purchase like this is not like buying a stock F550.