mert34
Well-Known Member
Buyer beware when buying new as well. Lol
Exactly, even new cars arrive damanged and a dealer will fix them and sell as new without saying a single word about it.
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Buyer beware when buying new as well. Lol
Still lots of questions….. but I don’t want to add to your stress.I've bought my fair share of used vehicles (and I can fix most things on my own, at least outside of a warranty period) and I've never had a problem like this. And used or not, it only had 14K miles- practically new.
For those asking why the local dealer is saying it was a bad install, they told me that the gaskets/seals look sloppy and that there are wire looms out of place and/or not attached to anything. Also, the other dealer said "long block" to my local dealer. Doesn't sound like a factory crate motor...
I have used CarFax to locate venicles and or to prove or disprove fraud and or hidden damage or repairs on many occasions and found them to be the best first resource for information.As mentioned earlier Carfax is not the gospel. I’ve bought a couple used cars over the years that had pristine Carfax records but then uncovered damage/repairs that were not called out. I would have an independent 3rd party go over the vehicle before buying used now (if you don’t have the mechanical knowledge to handle it yourself).
Don't buy used if something like this bothers you.Long story short, my Jeep is at my local dealer getting an oil leak fixed under warranty. Before starting with they realized the engine had “a lot of work done.” They checked their database and there were no records of it. I told them I remember seeing something on the Carfax when I bought it (used with 14k mikes). They called the dealer I bought it from today and found out that the original owner blew the engine and the dealer put in a new long block. I had no idea.
So now I’m super frustrated. Not only was I lied to but not I feel like the engine swap was such a terrible job (current dealer said so) that I don’t have much confidence the sheep will last as long as I want it to (I wanted to keep it forever).
What a day…
Yes, two different dealers. The second one, where my Gladiator is receiving service, found out about the long block because they called the first dealer to see what work was done because it was so obvious. They were covering themselves to make sure the work would get reimbursed under warranty. And no, I wasn’t offered the vehicle as certified.Are we talking about two different Jeep dealers here? I have a hard time believing if the long block was installed by one Jeep dealer, the other Jeep should have had access to those repair records.
Also, was it at least sold to you as a "Certified" vehicle with the extend 7/100K warranty?
This. It rests entirely on the reputation of the dealer and the ability/talent of the technician(s) doing the work.I wouldn’t necessarily take this as gospel…. Why and how did the other dealer do a terrible job? This should be explained in good detail by the current dealer, and depending on their response would dictate my return. (Personally)…
It is easy to bash someone else or some place else for next to anything…. But is it valid??? Show me how they did a bad job? Wires chaffing? Bolts loose? What?
If they are claiming the timing cover- well… someone better explain something quick! Because when a motor is replaced it’s a crate motor drop in…… if the pervious dealer did a breakdown rebuild- that’s a whole different basket of crap…..
I wouldn’t be worried about a crate motor replacement. I would worry a lot if the dealer did an in house rebuild.
They’re thankfully covering it. It should be out of the shop either today or tomorrow. Surprisingly they gave me a loaner on Friday (after them having my Jeep for three days while I used the wife’s car).Sorry to hear of your troubles and I hope you get it sorted out. One thing sticks out from OP's original statement "They checked their database and there were no records of it". Jeep's databases are nationwide if not global. The fact that they had no record of the engine replacement would lead one to believe that it wasn't replaced by an authorized Jeep dealer. If that's the case, your current dealer will balk at covering anything under warranty, so the hope that they'll go through the engine and correct anything that isn't up to OEM is probably a pipe dream. Hate to be a downer, but you may be on the hook for an expensive repair. Hope that's not the case. Good luck.
Wow thats crazy. Do you have the URL for this story?Do you think CF caught these?
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https://www.motortrend.com/news/jeep-gladiator-wrangler-chevy-nevada-train-derailment/Wow thats crazy. Do you have the URL for this story?