I'd certainly imagine they have to show how it's the fault of the immobiliser. This all suggests they know exactly what's wrong with the car as well so it should be a really easy fix.
Surely these statements mean they have to prove the Ghost system was responsible for the issues I am facing BEFORE they can reject the claim?
I thought the onus was on the dealer to prove that the alarm system was a direct cause of the issue.
Why anyone takes a car to a main dealer these days is beyond me.
I thought the onus was on the dealer to prove that the alarm system was a direct cause of the issue.
I've literally just had a car scrapped because the RAC boosted it and fried the ECU and BCM. My local garage has seen a brand new Audi RS something or other written off because of the same thing. Do not boost new cars. I'd be extremely surprised if you get anywhere with RAC complaints, it's up to you to provide them clear cut evidence it was their fault and typically dealers won't want to get involved.
Well the workshop manager for the dealer has wrote me a report (via an email) stating that an overcharge has been detected in the service plan for one of the cars batteries, so they have helped in at least showing the 'potential' cause of the issue...
Will be speaking with my solicitor in the morning so will update with what they say...
Warranty.
Notwithstanding being rejected in this particular case, you'd have to have extremely little faith in dealers to elect to pay an independent specialist to fix a car that's covered by manufacturer warranty.
Oh yeah for sure. But it's normally a case of gritting your teeth with the warranty and hoping that they a) actually do locate an issue b) the warranty will cover it and c) this actually fixes the fault. The number of times I've heard of car dealers just playing part bingo, doesn't give me any faith that they are in fact expert diagnosticians and deserving of the £120+ ph rates they charge.
They should be able to give you a date and time on the log too.