Ford Rehires Human Engineers After AI Systems Fail Quality Checks
U.S. automaker Ford has rehired more than 300 veteran quality inspectors after artificial intelligence systems failed to meet production standards. Executives admitted the automated tools lacked necessary expertise, prompting a swift return to human oversight.
June 30, 2026 Ahmet Koçak
An assembly worker of Ford Motor in Michigan, January 26, 2022 - Reuters

Ahmet Koçak
Editor
Ford has rehired more than 300 veteran quality inspectors after its artificial intelligence systems failed to meet operational expectations.
The U.S. automaker initially adopted the automated technology across some parts of its operations to conduct quality checks, cut costs, and increase productivity.
AI Limitations Revealed
Corporate executives acknowledged that the automated systems lacked the specialized training and expertise of experienced human technicians.
Charles Poon, vice president of vehicle hardware engineering, stated that Ford incorrectly assumed introducing AI and design requirements would automatically produce high-quality vehicles.
The company had previously deployed 900 AI-powered cameras across its manufacturing plants to identify quality issues at the source and mitigate supply disruptions.
Management eventually determined that the technology was only as effective as the information used to train it.
Return to Human Oversight
Many knowledgeable engineers departed the company before their expertise could be integrated into the automated systems.
Ford has now reintroduced these veteran workers to train the machine learning tools and mentor younger employees.
This operational shift marks a reversal in recent corporate messaging regarding automation.
In June, Ford Chief Executive Officer Jim Farley predicted that AI would displace white-collar workers, while Chief Operating Officer Kumar Galhotra told investors in October that the firm was deploying AI across its entire industrial system.
Quality Index Rebound
Following the rehiring initiative, Ford returned to the top position among mainstream automakers in the U.S. JD Power Initial Quality Study.
The firm had not held this industry benchmark ranking since 2010.
A corporate press release attributed the improvement to a significant talent refresh.
This restructuring involved replacing senior leaders in engineering, supply chain, and manufacturing operations, as well as hiring 300 veteran engineers to guide the production process.
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