Willwork4truck
Spends too much time on here
Are you putting a PC on that unicycle?Very nice and totally agree...but did they have a Pedal Commander???
Are you putting a PC on that unicycle?Very nice and totally agree...but did they have a Pedal Commander???
Kinda funny, I've never got a bad trade in price and I always do my own. On a previous post I mentioned that Jeep replaced my cam, lifter and rockers, guess what the carfax said? Routine maintenance performed or something like that. Whoever got that Jeep probably has no clue that the engine was worked on and torn apart, didn't even mention they changed the sparkplugs. I take those carfaxes with a grain of salt, seen numerous that didn't mention accidents but the seam line was visible upon inspection from replacement parts being painted and not properly blended. Carfax also never showed that my Jeeps's transmission had been rebuilt either.When I worked for Hyundai, they would void the warranty if it wasn't a Hyundai brand filter. It could be the exact same filter from the parts store, but if it didn't say "Hyundai" on it..you were out of luck.
I'd heard enough horror stories from FCA techs to know FCA warranty work is just as bad. It also hurts your resale value if you do not show oil changes.
For the toy or anything outside of warranty, I do all my own work. Anything that'd be questionable, it's going in to be done and tracked. Call it the CYA approach.
I have the tools to do it, and I'm not lazy. Just did 4 oil changes this weekend, which was all of my vehicles except 1. The ram timed out just a few days under a year, about 4,000 miles.Some people have way too much free time on their hands. Why on earth anyone would want to rotate their own tires is beyond me. Discount Tire does it for free. I'm in & out of there in 30 minutes. Oil changes at the dealership. Semi synthetic is fine. I also use 87 octane gas which some people spaz out about on this forum. It's just a truck. I also go to a car wash with brushes.
You can call BS all day, but not only did I get that info from multiple desk folk while working at the dealership, but also from the two techs who were most trained in Hyundai/Kia. As someone who worked on their own vehicle..I wanted to know what I could and couldn't do, so I could better relay in case the question was asked to me.Sorry, but I call BS on this statement above!
Per the Moss-Magnusson act, if the OEM requires you to use an exact specific product, they must provide it for free.
I have to say, I've traded in 4 vehicles in the last 10 years, and not one of them asked to see any oil change receipts or records. My 2015 F150 was traded in on my RAM, and I got more money for it than I thought possible, while getting 25% off my new Rebel. Not one mention of oil changes, which were done by me.
I guess if you sell it to someone in a private sale, they want to see maintenance receipts. Which I have my own logs and receipts for my oil changes, I will have the dealership do the "major services" should I still have it when I get to that point.
Can I guess the Jeep you're referring to was a Wrangler? Only guessing because the appraiser we had didn't even dive deep into Wranglers due to value and marker desire. We would have 10yr old Wranglers brought in and put back out to sell with zero maintenance done since trade in and ask tip top dollar. They'd last maybe 3 days and make bank.Kinda funny, I've never got a bad trade in price and I always do my own. On a previous post I mentioned that Jeep replaced my cam, lifter and rockers, guess what the carfax said? Routine maintenance performed or something like that. Whoever got that Jeep probably has no clue that the engine was worked on and torn apart, didn't even mention they changed the sparkplugs. I take those carfaxes with a grain of salt, seen numerous that didn't mention accidents but the seam line was visible upon inspection from replacement parts being painted and not properly blended. Carfax also never showed that my Jeeps's transmission had been rebuilt either.
Still BS. No "desk folk" or Super Duper trained techs can deny a warranty claim because you used a quality filter that didn't say Hyundai on it. Biggest crock of $hit I've read on this forum in quite some time. It is VERY rare to see an engine failure due to an oil filter unless you just fail to ever replace it. However, if one did occur, any dealership, regardless of brand, must have pretty compelling reasons to deny a warranty claim. You believe what you want, but I'll call BS all day long on crap like this and bet if I called Hyundai Corporate they would laugh at thisYou can call BS all day, but not only did I get that info from multiple desk folk while working at the dealership, but also from the two techs who were most trained in Hyundai/Kia. As someone who worked on their own vehicle..I wanted to know what I could and couldn't do, so I could better relay in case the question was asked to me.
Okay bud. You're right..the time I worked there was a complete illusion and you know more about what conversations I had.Still BS. No "desk folk" or Super Duper trained techs can deny a warranty claim because you used a quality filter that didn't say Hyundai on it. Biggest crock of $hit I've read on this forum in quite some time. It is VERY rare to see an engine failure due to an oil filter unless you just fail to ever replace it. However, if one did occur, any dealership, regardless of brand, must have pretty compelling reasons to deny a warranty claim. You believe what you want, but I'll call BS all day long on crap like this and bet if I called Hyundai Corporate they would laugh at this
Okay "bud". I know BS when I see it and I doubt that there is a single member of this forum that believes what you have stated above is reality. Let's just agree to disagree and you can continue to believe what a bunch of dealership morons have told you while you worked there. That may have been YOUR stealerships policy, but it certainly is not a Hyundai policy!Okay bud. You're right..the time I worked there was a complete illusion and you know more about what conversations I had.
Per the act, you are correct..they cannot. But get over your density and read my statement about the act. "98% of people either know nothing about it, or aren't willing to fight the dealership over it"
I have seen FCA techs and dealerships try the warranty denied claim first on multiple instances because FCA warranties don't pay hardly anything. Hyundai/Kia are no different. The service dept (techs/writers/etc) are going to try to make as much as they can in an instance where warranty is gray. Sure, they (OEM) may accept the warranty claim, but when they pay 3 hours labor only on a job that takes 8 hours of labor..why not charge the customer 8 hours of labor plus parts?
..but again, you know more than I do of conversations I was personally involved in. So go on warrior.
I never said their policy wasn't BS. There's a reason I don't work there anymore.Okay "bud". I know BS when I see it and I doubt that there is a single member of this forum that believes what you have stated above is reality. Let's just agree to disagree and you can continue to believe what a bunch of dealership morons have told you while you worked there. That may have been YOUR stealerships policy, but it certainly is not a Hyundai policy!
I'm all done pissing my friend...I never said their policy wasn't BS. There's a reason I don't work there anymore.
As I said previously, I know what some will do because I've seen and heard first hand..so I'm giving all info out there to allow OP and others to make the decision based on what they want to risk. I know I will be covering my own self because I know how they'll screw people.
Discredit me all you want, but until you understand the fact that I'm agreeing with your statement that how they (dealership) do things is garbage vs. the OEM policy..you're turning this into a pissing match over nothing.
Yea while CF shows “some” of the reported maintenance it’s so vague as to be basically worthless (other than oil changes). AutoCheck doesn’t show any services at all, and both firms can get spoofed on wrecks, flooding, title washing. At least you can tell what states it has been in and appx mileage driven annually.Kinda funny, I've never got a bad trade in price and I always do my own. On a previous post I mentioned that Jeep replaced my cam, lifter and rockers, guess what the carfax said? Routine maintenance performed or something like that. Whoever got that Jeep probably has no clue that the engine was worked on and torn apart, didn't even mention they changed the sparkplugs. I take those carfaxes with a grain of salt, seen numerous that didn't mention accidents but the seam line was visible upon inspection from replacement parts being painted and not properly blended. Carfax also never showed that my Jeeps's transmission had been rebuilt either.
Wrong. I believe there are dealerships out their that try and do get away with this.Okay "bud". I know BS when I see it and I doubt that there is a single member of this forum that believes what you have stated above is reality. Let's just agree to disagree and you can continue to believe what a bunch of dealership morons have told you while you worked there. That may have been YOUR stealerships policy, but it certainly is not a Hyundai policy!
I am not "wrong". You, my friend, have misunderstood my response. I am not saying that dealers don't do this. I am saying that Hyundai Corporate does not share in what the dealer is doing or telling customers. Yes, it does happen as dishonest dealers lie to consumers all the time. What I have been referencing all along is that "Hyundai" has no corporate policy whereby warranties are null and void because someone doesn't use a Hyundai labelled oil filter.Wrong. I believe there are dealerships out their that try and do get away with this.
its not right, but I’m sure it happens. Hopefully they don’t get away with it ver y often.
Yup, that cleared it up. Feel better now? Was it worth it?I am not "wrong". You, my friend, have misunderstood my response. I am not saying that dealers don't do this. I am saying that Hyundai Corporate does not share in what the dealer is doing or telling customers. Yes, it does happen as dishonest dealers lie to consumers all the time. What I have been referencing all along is that "Hyundai" has no corporate policy whereby warranties are null and void because someone doesn't use a Hyundai labelled oil filter.
I'm done replying to this. My point has been made and should be crystal clear now
Yes sir...far better than you could ever imagine!Yup, that cleared it up. Feel better now? Was it worth it?
We all now perfectly understand all we need to know...