Fight for your money back and avoid ANYTHING JLR in future, the thing will be a never ending money pit even if they do the chain. Japanese, some German or Swedish my boy ...
German is most definitely not reliable
The jags are fine as long as don't do diesel.
With all these brands it's the diesels that are the problematic engines.
BMW chains fail left right and centre, vw oil pumps shear from the shaft, Volvo were at one point using PSA 1.6hdi engines which are terrible, not sure if they used the 2.0 ford diesels which are just as terrible
Ford's latest diesel engines have wet belt failures, chain failures and oil pump failures very common, our ranger at work has done 35k and it's already had all 3 done and 3 weeks ago the crank snapped. Spoke to ford and our vehicle has 36 pages of warranty history already with ford and it's only just 3 years old.
Modern Diesel engines are quite literally the devil's work made to make you poor
It's JCT600, so fairly large.
Already spoken to them 3 times yesterday & they have asked for the info the independent specialist gave me including the repair quote, so i've sent that & some stuff they gave me that the software spat out stating timing chain fault detected.
It's got a full Jaguar history & was supposedly jaguar approved, I can see they prepped it for sale as there is some stuff in the online service history & when I set up the app it also appears to have "Jaguar assist" paid up until next year.
It does have a warranty, but i'm ignoring it & using the consumer rights act as i've had it under 30 days. There is no finance, I put £250 on a credit card & paid the rest via Visa Debit.
I'm sure they'll see you right then. Obviously they'll want to do their own checks to cover themselves, but at least they aren't fobbing you off
Buying a car with rust issues is like buying a puppy with distemper, reject the damned thing, at best they'll fake it up and it'll be back again in no time. De rusting a Kia? Not gonna' happen.
It'll be fine, I'll swap it in 3 years it's not major just starting to seep through in the edges where the paint is thinner
Had a similar thing on our Audi we still have, lasted 10 years before we had to do something about it again.