coolum
7th August 2014, 09:00 AM
My wife called a well known roadside assist and said that she had slightly clipped a gutter and the car had a developed a slight clicking noise.
The tyre was not flat but she was concerned that there may be something wrong so she called for Roadside assist.
She was told that this would be an accident issue and that she should call her insurer.
W T F
I called to complain to the famous service provider and found that HAD she said that she suspected she had a flat tyre or some such semantic and actually avoided the 'cause' of the call, then they would have been happy to send someone out. She is blond - but it appears she should have acted more like 'it'.
After complaining about the policy they said they would listen to the tapes and 'chastise' the operator if they thought they were in error (turning on your own, is a 'trick' they got from America) - however I stated that I felt the error was that they should have provided a service to review the vehicle and determine if it was drivable or not, at the very least.
I am not blaming the operator as its a policy issue - bad policy, unsafe policy, dangerous policy, potentially fatal - flaw in policy.
Not all of us are familiar with mechanical eventualities - some people in society have 'other contributions' to make and therefore pay for someone / experts to oversee things they are not sure of.
SO
Warn your wives - if they hit a pothole (its QLD - it happens) make sure they say they have a flat tyre ONLY. No one knows how it happened - it was round and now it not really as round as it was any more.
I swear on this here roadside assist policy booklet (all 10 sections) that I didn't hit any potholes I have not been near any gutters or culverts, I have not run over any debris during a storm nor driven near any building sites .. in fact it went flat for no reason.
Otherwise you will have to drive to rescue the fair maiden and change the tyre yourself or they carry on and he the victim of failure on the road - heaven forbid.
In my wifes case there was no damage to the tyre or wheel or any other part of the car and possibly picked up a stone when in the gutter as the clicking went away and I cannot se anything wrong with the car .
In another situation the outcome may have been different.
Sorry for the rant - made in the interests of the community -- Mods could move to another section if necessary.
Steve.
The tyre was not flat but she was concerned that there may be something wrong so she called for Roadside assist.
She was told that this would be an accident issue and that she should call her insurer.
W T F
I called to complain to the famous service provider and found that HAD she said that she suspected she had a flat tyre or some such semantic and actually avoided the 'cause' of the call, then they would have been happy to send someone out. She is blond - but it appears she should have acted more like 'it'.
After complaining about the policy they said they would listen to the tapes and 'chastise' the operator if they thought they were in error (turning on your own, is a 'trick' they got from America) - however I stated that I felt the error was that they should have provided a service to review the vehicle and determine if it was drivable or not, at the very least.
I am not blaming the operator as its a policy issue - bad policy, unsafe policy, dangerous policy, potentially fatal - flaw in policy.
Not all of us are familiar with mechanical eventualities - some people in society have 'other contributions' to make and therefore pay for someone / experts to oversee things they are not sure of.
SO
Warn your wives - if they hit a pothole (its QLD - it happens) make sure they say they have a flat tyre ONLY. No one knows how it happened - it was round and now it not really as round as it was any more.
I swear on this here roadside assist policy booklet (all 10 sections) that I didn't hit any potholes I have not been near any gutters or culverts, I have not run over any debris during a storm nor driven near any building sites .. in fact it went flat for no reason.
Otherwise you will have to drive to rescue the fair maiden and change the tyre yourself or they carry on and he the victim of failure on the road - heaven forbid.
In my wifes case there was no damage to the tyre or wheel or any other part of the car and possibly picked up a stone when in the gutter as the clicking went away and I cannot se anything wrong with the car .
In another situation the outcome may have been different.
Sorry for the rant - made in the interests of the community -- Mods could move to another section if necessary.
Steve.