I originally posted on MoneySavingExpert, but they have suggested I post here.
On 10 Dec 2021 I received delivery of a new Vauxhall Combo Cargo van for which I had paid a £250 deposit by credit card and the balance by bank transfer. This van had a 1.5 BlueHDi (DV5) engine which is an engine used by a wide range of vehicles and manufacturers. It has both a timing belt and a cam chain.
On 31st July 2023, with 113,887 miles on the odometer, a link in the cam chain failed causing catastrophic failure, and making the vehicle uneconomic to repair (the only option provided by Vauxhall included a cost approximately equivalent to the book value of the vehicle before the cam chain failure). There was no goodwill offering from Vauxhall with respect to fixing the failure.
The exact issue I have faced is a known problem that appears widespread. The most notable documentation of the issue was in L'argus (in French - https://www.largus.fr/actualite-auto...-11079390.html). There is also a lot of anecdotal evidence of the same problem in online forums. In summary, the 7mm chain was not up to the job and so new vehicles are now produced with an 8mm chain to resolve the issue. There was no formal recall for vehicles with the 7mm chain, which is what was fitted to my van.
I complained to Vauxhall, the retailer and the Credit Card company (under section 75). I had no joy from any of those routes, so focused my energies on the Section 75 Credit Card company claim. They rejected my claim, so I escalated it to the Financial Ombudsman Service who also rejected my claim.
Within this process I commissioned an expert report, who used a Vauxhall Master Technician to examine the cam chain. They were unambiguous about the cause of the failure, that the chain was not of sufficient durability and that this was an issue of manufacture.
I feel I have now reached the end of the road, short of legal action. I need to make a decision whether to pursue this further. I, as a layman, believe in the merits of my case and that I am "in the right" in seeking redress. I am less confident that that is the result I would get if I pursued legal action, mostly on the back of my experience so far where I feel I have provided overwhelming evidence, but it has been deemed insufficient. Going to court is a huge financial gamble. Not going to court is a huge financial loss. It is tough to know which way to go. I can mitigate some of the gamble, I believe, by capping my claim at £10k (instead of well over £20k) and going through the small claims court. But any further action is an expensive gamble.
Details here are obviously a very high level summary. I have collated a comprehensive document pack that is now 179 pages long (and doesn't yet include the latest correspondence from the FOS).
For a little more context, I work as a self employed same day courier. That means I get ad hoc jobs to deliver from point a to point b, which can be anywhere in the country (or even potentially outside of the country). My earnings, after costs, are substantially below the minimum wage (it's a bit of a lifestyle choice). I would typically do 2 or 3 deliveries per day over 12 hour days or more. I say this to highlight how significant a loss this is for me and how difficult it is to commit further substantial funds to "fight my corner".
On 10 Dec 2021 I received delivery of a new Vauxhall Combo Cargo van for which I had paid a £250 deposit by credit card and the balance by bank transfer. This van had a 1.5 BlueHDi (DV5) engine which is an engine used by a wide range of vehicles and manufacturers. It has both a timing belt and a cam chain.
On 31st July 2023, with 113,887 miles on the odometer, a link in the cam chain failed causing catastrophic failure, and making the vehicle uneconomic to repair (the only option provided by Vauxhall included a cost approximately equivalent to the book value of the vehicle before the cam chain failure). There was no goodwill offering from Vauxhall with respect to fixing the failure.
The exact issue I have faced is a known problem that appears widespread. The most notable documentation of the issue was in L'argus (in French - https://www.largus.fr/actualite-auto...-11079390.html). There is also a lot of anecdotal evidence of the same problem in online forums. In summary, the 7mm chain was not up to the job and so new vehicles are now produced with an 8mm chain to resolve the issue. There was no formal recall for vehicles with the 7mm chain, which is what was fitted to my van.
I complained to Vauxhall, the retailer and the Credit Card company (under section 75). I had no joy from any of those routes, so focused my energies on the Section 75 Credit Card company claim. They rejected my claim, so I escalated it to the Financial Ombudsman Service who also rejected my claim.
Within this process I commissioned an expert report, who used a Vauxhall Master Technician to examine the cam chain. They were unambiguous about the cause of the failure, that the chain was not of sufficient durability and that this was an issue of manufacture.
I feel I have now reached the end of the road, short of legal action. I need to make a decision whether to pursue this further. I, as a layman, believe in the merits of my case and that I am "in the right" in seeking redress. I am less confident that that is the result I would get if I pursued legal action, mostly on the back of my experience so far where I feel I have provided overwhelming evidence, but it has been deemed insufficient. Going to court is a huge financial gamble. Not going to court is a huge financial loss. It is tough to know which way to go. I can mitigate some of the gamble, I believe, by capping my claim at £10k (instead of well over £20k) and going through the small claims court. But any further action is an expensive gamble.
Details here are obviously a very high level summary. I have collated a comprehensive document pack that is now 179 pages long (and doesn't yet include the latest correspondence from the FOS).
For a little more context, I work as a self employed same day courier. That means I get ad hoc jobs to deliver from point a to point b, which can be anywhere in the country (or even potentially outside of the country). My earnings, after costs, are substantially below the minimum wage (it's a bit of a lifestyle choice). I would typically do 2 or 3 deliveries per day over 12 hour days or more. I say this to highlight how significant a loss this is for me and how difficult it is to commit further substantial funds to "fight my corner".
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