Maybe I am mistaken.
You are. MM was put in place so you can do things to the vehicle you own. If you put a bigger turbo on they have to prove the bigger turbo caused the damage. Not that just because you did it the warranty's gone. But once they know you have the bigger turbo removing it doesn't remove their knowledge in regards to future problems. You just have to find the right lawyers.
You are. MM was put in place so you can do things to the vehicle you own. If you put a bigger turbo on they have to prove the bigger turbo caused the damage.
That is how you interpret it. I stated how I interpret it. How do you think the automobile manufacturers interpret it. The wording is pretty vaque in my opinion. I think it is you who are mistaken if you think that MM gives you Carte Blanche to mod though.
It is how the court interprets it that counts. Regardless, pursuant to MM, the dealer has the burden of proof, not the car owner. Stated another way, it is presumed that the aftermarket part DID NOT cause the problem unless the dealer can prove it did beyond a preponderance of the evidence.
That is how you interpret it. I stated how I interpret it. How do you think the automobile manufacturers interpret it. The wording is pretty vaque in my opinion. I think it is you who are mistaken if you think that MM gives you Carte Blanche to mod though.
i automatically thought "my cobb SRI is innocent until proven guilty"
giving false information so as to not warrant a claim. kinda like making the fine print readily available to you in a language you can understand
but then this caught my eye...
Under a full warranty, in the case of a defect, malfunction, or failure to conform with the written warranty, the warrantor:
to me that says clearly that any aftermarket stuff cannot be warranted on your car as long as it's clearly stated....
No..actually I just think its funny you guys pull the MM act....It has been tried many times and usually the owner loses.I guess that's how you get to 9000 posts.
. The wording is pretty vaque in my opinion. I think it is you who are mistaken if you think that MM gives you Carte Blanche to mod though.
I already know how the courts interpret it, please don't hurt yourself.
...It has been tried many times and usually the owner loses.
The Dealers and MNAO has far too many resources and power for a little guy like us to fight.
Band here?
Did I satisfy your need for a longer response?
Like I have said Previously Mr. Lawyer.And you base this on personal experience or antidotes you have read about on the internet? As an attorney for ~23 years I have handled several warranty denial cases over the years and they were all settled in the consumer/my client's favor. The dealer's burden is much more than just having a mechanic or service adviser merely claim that the after market part at issue caused the failure; they must prove it to the legal standard termed a "preponderance of the evidence"...the consumer has no burden of proof whatsoever.
I think if you look at this logically Mazda was not the one in the wrong here. The guy going in or the warranty work under fraudulent circumstances is.
How is this case any different from insurance fraud?
If you are so sure of your opinion being right then go ahead and take a fully modded vehicle in for service and see where you get.
Not far I bet.