Originally posted by tigger73
View Post
Above Forum Ad
Collapse
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Reverse sensors question
Collapse
X
-
2009 Passat CC TDI - With everything minus reverse camera
-
Reverse sensors question
Originally posted by dunners View PostIt's actually a very common practice most dealerships do it in some form or another. If anything goes wrong with it the responsibility is with the dealership who fitted it (or in turn the original manufacturer).
Whether it is fitted at the factory or the dealer has no difference to functionality if it's OEM. When you buy a new car with an option I think most people would expect that OEM/genuine parts were going to be used irrespective of where that part was fitted.
Same as when you take it to the dealer for service you expect genuine parts/oils to be used.
Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkLast edited by tigger73; 17-03-2014, 04:15 PM.
2017 Tiguan Sportline - Tigger73's 162TSI Sportline
2016 Scirocco R, stage 1, 205kwaw (sold) - Tigger73's Scirocco R Build
2013 Tiguan 155TSI, stage 1, 144kwaw (sold) - Tigger73's 155TSI Build
2011 Tiguan 125TSI, Stage 2+, 152kwaw (sold) - Tigger73's 125TSI Build
Comment
-
Originally posted by tigger73 View Postif they're not going to have the same features you'd think the sales guys ought to explain that it's not going to have the same options as the OEM part.
Whether it is fitted at the factory or the dealer has no difference to functionality if it's OEM. When you buy a new car with an option I think most people would expect that OEM/genuine parts were going to be used irrespective of where that part was fitted.
That’s why I said if you’re buying make sure you specify what you want, in this circumstance OPS. If you have requested the OEM option and then they fit aftermarket that’s when you have a case, otherwise they have fulfilled their obligations.
Yes it sucks and to a point some may consider it deceit, but they aren't breaking any rules.2009 Passat CC TDI - With everything minus reverse camera
Comment
-
They aren't breaking any rules but putting the onus on the consumer to understand every acronym from multiple manufacturers is poor form. A dealer who wants to build rapport and a loyal customer base should offer aftermarket as an inferior, cheaper option only if it has less functionality than oem as in the case of ops.
Sent from my HTC One using Tapatalk2011 Skoda Octavia vRS TDI DSG wagon|Revo Stage 1|Race Blue|Leather|Dynamic Xenons w 6000K|9w7 BT|THA475 Amp+active sub|Whiteline ALK|RVC|
2009 R36 wagon|Biscay Blue|RVC|Tailgate|ECU and DSG tune|LED DRL/Indicators|3D colour cluster|Quad LED tail rings|Climatronics upgrade|Dynaudio retrofit|B7 RLine Flat Steering Wheel|3AA CCM|TPMS Direct|B7 Adaptive Cruise with Front Assist|Discover Media retrofit|PLA 2.0|Lane Assist|BCM retrofit|High Beam Assist|DQ500
Comment
-
Originally posted by dunners View PostThis is what I said before, they don’t sell it advertising that it's OEM. You request parking sensors and they provide them (or ad them in to sweeten the deal). There is nothing which states that everything provided in a new car has to be OEM.
That’s why I said if you’re buying make sure you specify what you want, in this circumstance OPS. If you have requested the OEM option and then they fit aftermarket that’s when you have a case, otherwise they have fulfilled their obligations.
Yes it sucks and to a point some may consider it deceit, but they aren't breaking any rules.
Legally correct but probably not how the person signing the contract for the vehicle intended.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
2017 Tiguan Sportline - Tigger73's 162TSI Sportline
2016 Scirocco R, stage 1, 205kwaw (sold) - Tigger73's Scirocco R Build
2013 Tiguan 155TSI, stage 1, 144kwaw (sold) - Tigger73's 155TSI Build
2011 Tiguan 125TSI, Stage 2+, 152kwaw (sold) - Tigger73's 125TSI Build
Comment
2025 - Below Forum
Collapse
Comment