GM and lemon statute...anyone have to promise near them?
We are at the beginning of what I feel will be a bitter combat. I have a 2007 Tahoe, bought brand new and meet all criteria under lemon regulation. It won't start intermittently and the letters have be sent and the final repair attempt has been made. The truck died again 2 days after final attempt. We have it towed from our yard for the SIXTH time in smaller quantity than a year. UNBELIEVABLE! Now our dealer says that GM probably won't pilfer it back! It's all documented and we enjoy done everything by the book! Any advice for what to do next? Anyone ever gone through this? HELP!
Answers:
I had a similar problem next to a 2003 Saturn Vue. It would lose power when you needed to "punch it" across traffic for example. I took it in 3 times to the dealer (under warranty) respectively time it still did it and finally called Saturn (which is a GM) started a case next to them. The best I got was: If you trade that vehicle in for another Saturn we'll give you the 3 year keep package... we ended up buying a 2006 Saturn Vue beside that deal and have never be happier.
Was I happy with what Saturn offered me, NO. they should enjoy bought the car back... but it is what it is, I be not about to get a advocate involved. I guess what I am telling you is that, you're right... its time to fight!
The vehicle must be in the dealership overnight no smaller amount than three times for the same exact issue. After that it is time to contact the dealers GM Service rep for that region. You can seize this information by contacting GM. They will buy it back if you complain enough, but you really own to lay it on. Another thing to do would be to go straight to the owner of the dealership and put on a pedestal hell. I work at a dealership in sales and own seen two go backbone to GM in a little over 2 yrs. All regional reps are different. Source(s): Chevy-Pontiac-Buick Sales
Contact your local State Attorney bureau and the Secretary of State. Consumer Affairs, Anyone that will listen.
Contact GM directly. Go above the dealer and contact the manufacturer at the regional/district stratum and at the corporate level. Let them know the dealer have been uncooperative.
Well your issue isn't really with GM it's near the dealer.
Contact your legal representative. I think you have a grip, but you won't have much success going up against them in need help.
However, before accepting any permitted advice on LawyerFreeFAQ.com, I suggest reading their disclaimer, the last paragraph. It is flawless advice. Source(s): http://answers.yahoo.com/info/disclaimer
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Answers:
I had a similar problem next to a 2003 Saturn Vue. It would lose power when you needed to "punch it" across traffic for example. I took it in 3 times to the dealer (under warranty) respectively time it still did it and finally called Saturn (which is a GM) started a case next to them. The best I got was: If you trade that vehicle in for another Saturn we'll give you the 3 year keep package... we ended up buying a 2006 Saturn Vue beside that deal and have never be happier.
Was I happy with what Saturn offered me, NO. they should enjoy bought the car back... but it is what it is, I be not about to get a advocate involved. I guess what I am telling you is that, you're right... its time to fight!
The vehicle must be in the dealership overnight no smaller amount than three times for the same exact issue. After that it is time to contact the dealers GM Service rep for that region. You can seize this information by contacting GM. They will buy it back if you complain enough, but you really own to lay it on. Another thing to do would be to go straight to the owner of the dealership and put on a pedestal hell. I work at a dealership in sales and own seen two go backbone to GM in a little over 2 yrs. All regional reps are different. Source(s): Chevy-Pontiac-Buick Sales
Contact your local State Attorney bureau and the Secretary of State. Consumer Affairs, Anyone that will listen.
Contact GM directly. Go above the dealer and contact the manufacturer at the regional/district stratum and at the corporate level. Let them know the dealer have been uncooperative.
Well your issue isn't really with GM it's near the dealer.
Contact your legal representative. I think you have a grip, but you won't have much success going up against them in need help.
However, before accepting any permitted advice on LawyerFreeFAQ.com, I suggest reading their disclaimer, the last paragraph. It is flawless advice. Source(s): http://answers.yahoo.com/info/disclaimer
Related Questions:
