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Confrontation is never your friend . What will work is persistence , documentation , and the direct approach . When you lose your cool and start yelling , even those folks who are willing and able to help will become unavailable . Yeah , getting all worked up and indignant works for about 15 minutes , being consistent and firm is a better long term approach . That is why the previous thread about this was locked , it wasn't accomplishing anything , and challenging that decision does nothing positive . Now , let's try to remain calm and solve this , are we clear ? Dusty
I buy things with money, and take them home directly after buying them, never to return. I don't buy weak promises that need to be extracted later from less than reputable organizations - which in 2019, in the era of the MBA, is virtually all of them.
Now that I've read it, that's a pretty good philosophy. I've had very few good experiences with warranties.My last new bike, I paid ahead on two items - One was "prepaid service" for the first 6 major services on the bike, which is a complex shim-under-bucket water-cooled triple. This has been working out well, and if I keep the bike for 60,000+ miles (which I plan to do), it will have been a bargain.The other was a "road damage warranty" for the tires, which proposes to pay for a new tire if one goes flat due to a road hazard. I won't do that again, since the "uh, a few privisos, some quid-pro-quos" add up to a hassle that makes it almost impossible to get paid (as I've found out).But your "buy it slightly used and forget about warranties" is a good one, especially since a bike with a few miles on it is less likely to puke up a surprise for you .... !!Lannis
Guzzi approved my warranty repair within 2 weeks, but dealership requires almost $200 extra from me to do the repair because Guzzi does not pay them enough for labor on this repair.Apparently getting Guzzi to cover required cost of repair requires dealer or customer to "fight" with Guzzi to get proper warranty coverage.I didn't purchase the bike from this dealer, and I did the break in service (930 miles) myself so dealer does not want to fight for me.
Warranty work is a necessary evil, and it's truly a racket that pinches the dealer.First of all, warranty repair work is paid at flat rate. There's a book that specifies how much shop time will be paid for a given job. These times are frequently unrealistic and based upon ideal conditions, with no consideration for cleaning, broken bolts, incidental wiring repairs, and all of the little stuff that is frequently but not always necessary. A complex repair may require "stacking" several separate operations in order to have any hope of approaching an accurate labor payout. A skilled service manager who "knows the book" may be able to do this, but the manufacturer certainly isn't going to remind him if he misses something. And if he screws up and "overstacks", he risks increased scrutiny of his claims at best, rejection at worst.Furthermore, the manufacturer may or may not pay labor at the shop's quoted rate. This can depend on a lot of things, like whether or not the shop has the full complement of special (expensive) tools, been to all of the (expensive) training schools, purchases the requisite amount of parts and accessories, software packages, etc. If not, then warranty work may be paid at something less - maybe 75% of the shop's quoted labor rate.Any parts used in a warranty repair are paid at dealer cost, so there's no profit at all there.And to top it all off, "payment" frequently takes the form of a credit to the dealer's parts account. maybe accessories too, but seldom liquid funds.Mind you, the situation described here wasn't with a small, struggling manufacturer of limited means. I won't name them but they're a successful, established player with a commanding market share in their powersports segment.All that said, I never surcharged a customer for warranty work. If a unit bought somewhere else was brought to me at the height of the season that appeared to be a warranty black hole, I would either suggest they take it to their selling dealer or offer to take it on at a slower time.
Ncdan, agree. When I had to take my Griso to a different dealer than I bought the bike from, I made sure I spent a little money with the new guy on some other stuff. Hoping he succeeds, and that is more up to us customers than we want to admit. We complain about lack of dealers but are we supporting them with our dollars?