- Banned
- #31
You haven't paid for it yet , so you are in the driver's seat . They'll say : give us all your money , and after you give us the money , we'll fix it good as new . Ha !True
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You haven't paid for it yet , so you are in the driver's seat . They'll say : give us all your money , and after you give us the money , we'll fix it good as new . Ha !True
That's what the dealer could do , if OP pays them all the money .Eh just put a little bondo on it and sand it out! Good as new!
He hasn't paid for it yet , so he has a right to ask for price assistance because of the damage . That's not entitlement ; that's fair play .That's some ridiculous unwarranted entitlement mentality bullshit right there.
Exactly spot on !If you have another vehicle to use, reject the Wrangler due to the damage. New vehicle price = new vehicle, not a damaged one. Yes a Wrangler is going to get banged up, but you want to EARN your dings and scratches. Good way to get a 2019 too.
A dealer can really do body work on a car and sell it brand new w/o disclosing the damage?Lots of bad advise here. Being a Service Director for 35 years at the dealership level, this is just a normal ding that happens. The dealership caught it at time of delivery to the dealership. They will fix it, file a transportation claim and they will get paid the cost of the repair, ONLY. No discount from anybody.
The dealership can do what they want. They do not have to disclose transportation damage on something as minor as this. If the person that ordered it does not want it, so be it. The dealer has no way to discount the vehicle. Often times you will get a vehicle that had paint work done at the assembly plant and it is considered a "new" vehicle.
That is a easy fix, bondo, paint and it is done.
Normal damage? Minor? haha... Who know what else happend bwside the ding...maybe it warpee the window frame slightly and it couls leak or cause windshield cracking. I wouldn't accept it. Was the top track of the car carrier putting force on it the whole trip or something?Lots of bad advise here. Being a Service Director for 35 years at the dealership level, this is just a normal ding that happens. The dealership caught it at time of delivery to the dealership. They will fix it, file a transportation claim and they will get paid the cost of the repair, ONLY. No discount from anybody.
The dealership can do what they want. They do not have to disclose transportation damage on something as minor as this. If the person that ordered it does not want it, so be it. The dealer has no way to discount the vehicle. Often times you will get a vehicle that had paint work done at the assembly plant and it is considered a "new" vehicle.
That is a easy fix, bondo, paint and it is done.
That's fair play if they were going to sell him the Jeep as-is and if they were responsible for the damage, but they aren't. The dealership didn't screw this up; the transport company did. They're liable for that cost. The dealership doesn't have to eat it, nor should they.He hasn't paid for it yet , so he has a right to ask for price assistance because of the damage . That's not entitlement ; that's fair play .
I wouldn’t want to be the guy trying to get a manufacturer to cover a repaint warranty claim. Who knows who did it or when?You folks have no clue what happens at the assembly plants or at the dealer level.
Had this been a stock inventory order, the dealer would fix it, put it on the lot, sell it and if the new buyer had a issue with the paint, that then becomes a warranty issue.
Yeah, I'd trust the factory to fix it right. My dealership discounted mine because it was late in delivery. Why couldn't his dealership discount it for a ding?Lots of bad advise here. Being a Service Director for 35 years at the dealership level, this is just a normal ding that happens. The dealership caught it at time of delivery to the dealership. They will fix it, file a transportation claim and they will get paid the cost of the repair, ONLY. No discount from anybody.
The dealership can do what they want. They do not have to disclose transportation damage on something as minor as this. If the person that ordered it does not want it, so be it. The dealer has no way to discount the vehicle. Often times you will get a vehicle that had paint work done at the assembly plant and it is considered a "new" vehicle.
That is a easy fix, bondo, paint and it is done.