Home > Finance, Insurance & Warranties > Extended Warranty and Annual Servicing Quandary? |
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pld118 Member Since: 25 Mar 2013 Location: Bairns Posts: 4218 |
I would telephone and speak to the warranty provider. They might ask for the vehicle to undergo a health check (of course they might just say crack on as you’re planning to do).
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15th Mar 2020 3:35pm |
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aja500 Member Since: 15 Oct 2017 Location: South East Posts: 824 |
Thank you for taking the time to reply PLD118.
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15th Mar 2020 11:31pm |
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Bl4ckD0g Member Since: 16 Feb 2020 Location: 127.0.0.1 Posts: 1322 |
Are you actually over the service interval? Are you applying 12 months or going by the cars indication? |
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16th Mar 2020 9:07am |
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Alistair Member Since: 11 Feb 2011 Location: Peterborough / Bordeaux / Andorra Posts: 7941 |
I think the manufacturer’s guidelines are 12 months, mileage or car indicator - whichever comes first.....
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16th Mar 2020 9:24am |
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Bl4ckD0g Member Since: 16 Feb 2020 Location: 127.0.0.1 Posts: 1322 |
Ok. My service maintenance book doesn't say that. It clearly states: Refer to your Service Interval Indicator.
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16th Mar 2020 9:37am |
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Alistair Member Since: 11 Feb 2011 Location: Peterborough / Bordeaux / Andorra Posts: 7941 |
The L405 servicing is all recorded online - there is no book to stamp any more.
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16th Mar 2020 10:13am |
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Bl4ckD0g Member Since: 16 Feb 2020 Location: 127.0.0.1 Posts: 1322 |
I think you are conflating different issues. This is really simple;
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16th Mar 2020 10:24am |
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Alistair Member Since: 11 Feb 2011 Location: Peterborough / Bordeaux / Andorra Posts: 7941 |
You are correct - whilst on the Eurotunnel earlier, I looked at my manual - it explicitly states that the car dictates the need for a service & the intervals are only a guide.
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17th Mar 2020 8:07pm |
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Bl4ckD0g Member Since: 16 Feb 2020 Location: 127.0.0.1 Posts: 1322 |
Glad to hear you made it back! |
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17th Mar 2020 10:25pm |
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CS Member Since: 14 Apr 2015 Location: Edinburgh Posts: 1385 |
Better to have the debate about whether cover applies before you pay the premium than when you want to claim. Being an insurance contract it is subject to a requirement of "ultimate good faith" on the part of the policyholder, i.e. you need to tell the insurer anything that might be relevant to risk, and if you don't and they find out about the service history (not difficult, they presumably ask for evidence as part of the claim back-up) they may well refuse to pay. Having to go to arbitration/court at that stage to try to make them pay is unlikely to be good value. Being a renewal it's not the same as a warranty on an AU car that you have just bought, as the service history clock starts afresh when you buy.
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18th Mar 2020 11:10am |
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