Given you have a four year lease I would consider buying the extended Alliance Warranty for the final year or two if you are thinking of keeping it.
cheers,
Terry
You're in Brissy so I assume you bought local. Which service dept do you go to? North or south of the river?
Given you have a four year lease I would consider buying the extended Alliance Warranty for the final year or two if you are thinking of keeping it.
cheers,
Terry
Cheers,
Terry
D1 V8 (Gone)D2a HSE V8 (Gone)D3 HSE TDV6 (Unfortunately Gone)D4 V8
Glad you are back up and running. Touch wood but we have had no problems with our D4 (April 2011 build).
I have found some information that may be useful for others who find themselves in a similar situation. (Note that I'm not a lawyer so don't rely on my summary below).
Depending on whether you purchased before 1 Jan 2011 your consumer rights are different. Before 1 Jan 2011, you are under the old warranties and guarantees regime of the Trade Practices Act. My understanding is that if they keep fixing it for you whilst under warranty, they meet their obligations.
If purchased after 1 Jan 2011 you are covered by Australian Consumer Law which gives additional consumer protections. From the ACCC website:
"If there is a major failure with the goods, you can:
reject the goods and get a refund
reject the goods and get an identical replacement, or one of similar value if reasonably available, or
keep the goods and get compensation for the drop in value caused by the problem.
You get to choose, not the supplier or manufacturer."
Also of interest is about warranties under the new ACL - from the ACCC website:
"Even after a voluntary or manufacturer’s warranty expires you may still be entitled to a repair, replacement or refund. This will depend on what you purchased and the nature of the problem."
For more info:
ACCC Website
Cars Guide - Lemon Laws Protect You
Looking at the Lemon Story in the second link, it would appear that I'm stuck. Note that Land Rover made it into example 2.
Dean
Bummer for you but good info, mate.
A friend of mine ended up at VCAT (dont know if/what the QLD version is?) over car warranty issues, so there are extreme options, but its a bridge burning exercise for sure.
Now 2016 D4 HSE 'Leo' and Steve the Triumph Speed Twin
Then 2010 D4 3.0 HSE 'James'
Then 2010 RRS TDV8 'Roger' w traxide DBS, UHF, Cooper Zeons, Superchips remap
Then 2010 D4 TDV6 'Jumbo' w traxide DBS
First love 2002 D2 TD5 'Disco Stu'
It is outrageous that LR would not assist on Moreton Island - its hardly the ass end of the world. The beaches are designated roadways with speed limits. When I bought my D2 LR told me clearly that they would assist and if necessary recover the vehicle anywhere - including the islands on the beaches and dunes and muddy state forests etc...never needed that assistance though
If they sell a vehicle touted as the best offroader in the world they should support it off road...
Cheers
I will second that about LR assist......it's every in Australia, no exceptions according to the dealer. I questioned them about the csr....not a problem, they will come and you will not pay for the recovery!Originally Posted by mervwho
Brett....
I thought the same. When I originally looked at the Freelander 2, the dealer in Sydney said the 3 year warranty, roadside assist program was the best around. Breakdown or get stuck anywhere and they will come and save you. The conversation that followed was something like:
ME: "What about if I'm up out the back of Bamaga?"
DEALER: "Where?"
ME: "Its up the top of Queensland"
DEALER: "Oh. We would probably get the guys in Brisbane to come and sort out the problem"
I left it at that - wait a week for assistance!!!
Seriously though, the dealers do not seem to know what is and isn't covered and it is through this experience I have found out. When the car stopped on Moreton Is, Land Rover Assist said I was not covered for recovery there. I called the dealer who said that didn't sound right and he would follow it up. Dealer called back 45mins later and said Land Rover Assist was correct - no recovery. He was helpful however and had managed to track down the number of the guys at Bulwer who could get me back to the ferry.
If you don't believe it, look at the website.
Land Rover Roadside Assistance
"Service Area: An area in mainland Australia, Tasmania, Phillip Island and other areas that are trafficable by a two-wheel drive recovery vehicle or islands that are accessible by a two-wheel drive vehicle (excludes ferries)."
So no Fraser, no Moreton, no Rainbow or Stradie - just some of the most popular spots near where I live.
So my question to Land Rover is: What is the point of roadside assist recovery for an "all-terrain" vehicle when the recovery vehicle is only 2WD?
Answer: To help Dean out when his D4 breaks
So my advice to those who get to use their vehicles for what they are apparently designed for, get insurance that covers recovery in remote areas otherwise you may get a nasty surprise.
Dean
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