I agree.Hi James, your good lady is right - absolutely seek some form of recompense from the dealer and Seat UK - don’t let this be the end of it
I agree.Hi James, your good lady is right - absolutely seek some form of recompense from the dealer and Seat UK - don’t let this be the end of it
I like your misses thinking. I would be asking for a refund and maybe a years warranty as an engine swap isnt a small job. Plus the car has now lost some value due to having the engine swap, some people get nervous about engine swaps. I would contact Seat and explain the situation as they are normally good with this kind of stuff.My wife is giving me grief however and she thinks I should be due some sort of compensation seeing as the original job (service, timing belt and sundries) set me back to the tune of £810. Should I be pushing for something or should I be grateful everything was sorted out amicably? What are your thoughts on this.
Hi Fishbowlhead - as long as the car is over 3 years old (which it is) but has less than 100000 miles on it (not sure) you should be able to get an extended warranty from Seat - speak to your local dealer or VWFS directly as it is administered by them If not go aftermarket - Warrantywise get good reviews (feefo gold trusted award/Auto Express recommended)I should add that its a 2015 reg. Is this something Seat would offer, seems by the wording only for 3 year old cars then extending that warranty straight away.
Thanks for the info guys much appreciated, ill stop derailing the threadHi Fishbowlhead - have a look here: https://www.insurewithseat.co.uk/extended-warranty/#more-information
It happens, if it's faulty parts, it's not the fault of the mechanics, if it's the fault of the mechanic, he is human and things happens. I think they did what a shop can do in these situations. New engine from factory (plus the service and timing belt). Meanwhile they gave you a car. If I were you, I'll ask for an "extended" warranty for the engine (and other parts they changed) and a oil change or two as a gesture of goodwill for this bad Seat service experience. So if you sell the car, it still has warranty to the engine, and perhaps adding more value to it.My wife is giving me grief however and she thinks I should be due some sort of compensation seeing as the original job (service, timing belt and sundries) set me back to the tune of £810. Should I be pushing for something or should I be grateful everything was sorted out amicably? What are your thoughts on this.
No doubt, in the coming days I'll get a letter or email about customer satisfaction.
I'm glad you've got this sorted. Every business has problems occasionally. It's how they respond that matters. It sounds like they've done everything they can to rectify matters. Some dealers would have fought you all the way.I must say that this has been dealt with quickly and professionally with no expense to myself. Both SEAT and the dealership have been true to their word and I now have my car back albeit with a new engine installed.
My wife is giving me grief however and she thinks I should be due some sort of compensation seeing as the original job (service, timing belt and sundries) set me back to the tune of £810. Should I be pushing for something or should I be grateful everything was sorted out amicably? What are your thoughts on this.
Exactly what I've been thinking. I'd be pleased that they didn't try wriggling out of it, and they gave the use of a courtesy car, etc. I think the dealer has been pretty good. Imagine what situation you'd more likely be in if it had been with an independent dealer..... I'm having my cambelt/waterpump done on Tuesday, and I'm pleased I booked it in with a SEAT dealer.It happens, if it's faulty parts, it's not the fault of the mechanics, if it's the fault of the mechanic, he is human and things happens. I think they did what a shop can do in these situations. New engine from factory (plus the service and timing belt). Meanwhile they gave you a car. If I were you, I'll ask for an "extended" warranty for the engine (and other parts they changed) and a oil change or two as a gesture of goodwill for this bad Seat service experience. So if you sell the car, it still has warranty to the engine, and perhaps adding more value to it.
To be fair, the OP has dealt with a good dealer who has done the right thing but I know of plenty of cases where main dealers have behaved just as badly as any back-street garage could.I'm having my cambelt/waterpump done on Tuesday, and I'm pleased I booked it in with a SEAT dealer.
Never seen that fault before mateTo be fair, the OP has dealt with a good dealer who has done the right thing but I know of plenty of cases where main dealers have behaved just as badly as any back-street garage could.
Worse than that. I've heard of them denying liability for damage they've obviously done.Never seen that fault before mate
(to every common fault)
Yeah fair enoughChatting to service manager today about this -non Seat- his take was that you payed for the job and received a warranty, part failed and warranty honoured, end of, if it had happened months or even years down the line would you be still looking for some sort of compensation or as suggested the £810 back? He thinks the engine should have the standard parts warranty that Seat offer (12 or 24 months? )and the cambelt etc should still have 5 years as it will be a new unit fitted to the engine when built up. Seemed reasonable to me when we thought about it.