home bbs files messages ]

Just a sample of the Echomail archive

Cooperative anarchy at its finest, still active today. Darkrealms is the Zone 1 Hub.

   AUTOMOTIVE      Anything to do with cars      2,177 messages   

[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]

   Message 1,365 of 2,177   
   Roger Nelson to All   
   Unbelievable!   
   09 Oct 12 17:19:46   
   
   Hello All! [I wonder where the Smith name came from in this article]   
      
   Camaro owner records mechanics abusing car, scheming to get damages paid for   
   By Justin Hyde | Motoramic - Mon, Oct 8, 2012 11:27 AM EDT   
      
   When you own a sports car, you inevitably get a little paranoid about how it's   
   treated when in the care of strangers. One South Carolina man was worried   
   enough that when he took his 2010 Chevrolet Camaro SS in for service at a   
   Chevy dealer, he hid a voice recorder in the car. He was right to be worried:   
   The recorder caught mechanics doing burnouts and discussing how to make the   
   owner pay for a ruined clutch the car didn't have before coming in. Now the   
   Internet Justice League has taken the wheel. William Clark says he took his   
   Camaro to Best Chevrolet-Kia in Easley, S.C. for a clunking noise in the car's   
   six-speed manual transmission. After a previous visit to a different dealer,   
   his Camaro had died shortly after Clark retrieved it; while he suspected the   
   staff at that dealership of joyriding, he had no proof at the time.   
      
   This time, the voice recorder hidden in the door pocket catches employees   
   doing several burnouts and hard launches in the Camaro; Smith later says the   
   techs drove it harder in 20 minutes than he had in three years. Once back in   
   the shop, the mechanics realize the Camaro's clutch has been fried, and come   
   up with a plan to blame the damage on Smith, saying to "write it up as him   
   buying a (expletive) clutch," while saying another part failed under warranty   
   so that General Motors would pay for its replacement.   
      
   Smith says he's taken his evidence to the dealer and Chevrolet customer   
   service; the dealer offered to reassess the damage or take the Camaro as a   
   trade-in on another car, but refused Smith's demand to buy the car back. Smith   
   says Chevrolet customer service washed it hands of the problem, saying it was   
   an issue between him and the dealer. As of the last update, the car's smoked   
   clutch remains untouched.   
      
   Unfortunately for Smith, there's few other steps he can take that don't end in   
   court. Dealers are regulated by states; Clark can file a complaint with South   
   Carolina officials, but even with an audio recording the assessment of damage   
   isn't so clear-cut as if the mechanics had wrecked it on a test drive.   
   Instead, other Camaro owners have taken up the cause, posting Smith's video to   
   the dealership's Facebook page and otherwise making noise about the problem.   
      
   You can hear the entire exchange, including the profanity, here:   
      
   http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bE4Dh_82kMM&feature=plcp   
      
   A lawyer for Best Chevrolet, in a request to Yahoo Autos to take down this   
   story, told us in an email that the audio was "misleadingly edited." Clark has   
   said the dealership has threatened to sue him over the audio, but has also   
   spoken with him about buying the Camaro back. The dealership may soon learn   
   that in the Internet era, one burnt clutch can create quite the stink.   
      
      
   Regards,   
      
   Roger    
   --- timEd/386 1.10.y2k+   
    * Origin: NCS BBS - Houma, LoUiSiAna - (1:3828/7)   

[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]


(c) 1994,  bbs@darkrealms.ca