We had an original from new fitment car part fail, the main dealership miss-diagnosed what needed to be done ("the diagnostic computer says it's all OK"), then two visits later they actually worked out what was wrong and fitted the expensive replacement part. The car then covered 3,675 miles in the next period of only just over a year, and was it was due an MOT and service at the end of this August. We had the chance to put the car up on the ramp at the dealership at the start of August, so we did so, and that is when it was noticed that the new part had started leaking. Some of the fluid from the failing seal had dried and looked like an old leak, so it had probably started failing during the warranty period anyway! The car went in for the service and MOT it was due, it passed no advisories. The dealership said that they had "put some sealer" on the leak and we could collect the car. The part was out of warranty by only a few weeks (end of July) so they could not claim for a new one.
We emailed the main manufacturer UK HQ about this failure, said that there was no way we can get under the car here to check a new part fitted...and keep an eye on something like that. We should not even have to do this. How are we expected to see when something like this has failed? We do not have car ramps at home.
Said the car had had very little use since the new part had been fitted, so on the basis that the last one had survived 198,000 miles of use it was reasonable to expect that the new part do this too. It has currently lasted 1/55th of the lifespan that it should have done. It was supposedly a genuine manufacturer replacement part, so nothing cheap and nasty there! Clearly it is not fit for purpose..
What is a reasonable solution to this issue? A £650 part has failed, possibly only weeks out of warranty, but also guess probably during warranty, as it is in a place on the car not easily visible to us and we could not check up on it.
We emailed the main manufacturer UK HQ about this failure, said that there was no way we can get under the car here to check a new part fitted...and keep an eye on something like that. We should not even have to do this. How are we expected to see when something like this has failed? We do not have car ramps at home.
Said the car had had very little use since the new part had been fitted, so on the basis that the last one had survived 198,000 miles of use it was reasonable to expect that the new part do this too. It has currently lasted 1/55th of the lifespan that it should have done. It was supposedly a genuine manufacturer replacement part, so nothing cheap and nasty there! Clearly it is not fit for purpose..
What is a reasonable solution to this issue? A £650 part has failed, possibly only weeks out of warranty, but also guess probably during warranty, as it is in a place on the car not easily visible to us and we could not check up on it.
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