I'm a bit surprised at this. I buy cars on PCPs, and at trade-in time the better condition the car is in, the more positive equity I've got.
And with leases, I thought the lessor examined cars at the end of the contract with a fine toothcomb and charged the lessee for any damage. Wouldn't a company lessee than recharge the driver?
If SLO's experience is typical, then this isn't happening any more, but I'm not sure why.
Maybe their repair cosmetic damage and fiddle the electronic service records to pretend their got a full main dealer service history, charge the previous 'owner' to put everything right (even though they don't) and then flog it on to the next unsuspecting customer as a car kept in prisitine condition?
Below-par workmanship seems to be quite common these days in many fields of work - in engineering (construction for me), checking your work (and preferably by a colleague who's capable and independnt of the project) is done very seldomly - time is money, so things are only checked if and when a problem arises.
At my last job, I was asked on my first day as a 'get to know us/see how good you are' exercise to read through the design of another engineer. I found numerous mistakes, and one so large that the team had to pull several engineers away from other projects for a week to redesign a decent element of the project. This wasn't due to me being some genuis - any competent engineer could've spotted the big flaw in the design.
This was because they were with a fortnight of the project going to construction phase, so obviously they didn't want systems being installed that either didn't work as intended, or in this case, wouldn't fit in the ceiling void.
I suspect the same goes for car maintenance in dealerships - they do the least they can get away with, because most people these days have no clue about car maintenance (even simple tasks such as checking tyres, changing wipers or topping up certain fluids) and would certainly not check to see if maintenance work was actually done, even simple stuff.
That anecdote about a fellow Mazda car owner having a problem at my local dealership got me thinking about aless-than stellar experience there where, when I was getting my alloys replaced and new tyres fitted, they tried to palm off a set of different alloys and with no centre caps as those I'd ordered, probably knowing full well that their mistake and didn't tell me.
Lucky for me I noticed (so would most of us here), and managed to get the both the tyre fitting costs and a £25 discount on the alternate alloys fitted (and they [eventually] did find the correct new caps) - total saving of £65 - about 12-13% of the original total cost of the work.
Given quite a few Backroomers are finding it increasingly difficult to source high quality, honest dealerships, even it seems from manufacturers normally renowed for that, you have to envy those who do (or find a really good indie).
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