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Jesus danny.. thats rather naughty. You specifically stated in the for sale add that it used no Oil aswell :eek:
 
it was £1100 with 12 months mot and 9 months tax, full service history, only 100k, mint condition all around

owner had it for 5 years, he must have noticed it burning lots of oil and got rid quick

guess what goes around comes around, but ultimatly i didnt like the skoda it was bright red and attracted too much of the wrong attention

So it was way below normal price then so what did you expect? With £500 for a replacement engine it'd still be fairly cheap if it's in perfect condition.
 
Op buys cheap VRS and drives it like a ****.
Subsequently gets banned.
Sells car and lies in ad. (idiot)

Well done son you've done yourelf proud.

Also i'm loving that you buy brake pads from the scrappy - brilliant. 5 stars. :D
 
LOL, comedy gold.

Also, doesn't everyone here take what a vendor says with a pinch of salt?

Well there's taking it with a pinch of salt and there's outright lying - from what I can tell the advert veers closer to the latter description than the former. As an example saying it uses a little oil might be underselling the issue slightly so you would take that with a pinch of salt, saying it uses no oil is not in the same category, it's deceit plain and simple - it may well come under the Trade Descriptions Act as well if anyone felt like taking it that far.

And as already stated if you are banned from motoring then you're banned, there's no "but what if I drive a different car? How about if I use a tractor instead?". It's a ban because you have broken the law sufficiently seriously or enough times to earn the ban.
 
[TW]Fox;15414770 said:
Yes because people like Danny exist you cant trust anyone selling cars.

Agreed, and when I was younger and more trusting/naïve, I have been ripped off buying cars by people like Danny. So this really hits a nerve with me.

As said above, there’s bending the truth or omitting small details. And then there’s blatant deception.
 
Caveat Emptor

You would hope that someone buying a Turbocharged car would be able to spot the warning signs of a duff Turbo. If you don't keep your eyes open and take everything with a pinch of salt, you're going to get burned when buying a used car. If you're naive enough to think that the car is completely fine just because the vendor says it is, you should stick to buying brand new out of the showroom.
 
Caveat Emptor

You would hope that someone buying a Turbocharged car would be able to spot the warning signs of a duff Turbo. If you don't keep your eyes open and take everything with a pinch of salt, you're going to get burned when buying a used car. If you're naive enough to think that the car is completely fine just because the vendor says it is, you should stick to buying brand new out of the showroom.
How exactly does that work on eBay?

I ask out of genuine curiosity.
 
Go view before you bid.

Simples.

Only a fool would commit to buying something with contact having not checked the condition personally.

Or bid, win the auction, go and see the car, and if it isn't as described (I.E, the Turbo is knackered) you walk away.

Far many people think that they are doomed if they bid on a car on ebay which in reality turns out to be an utter nail. This quite simply isn't the case, and they can just leave.
 
Local Police would be interested in that auction as it IS fraud by misrepresentation. Stating here it drinks oil and stating completly the opposite on the ebay ad. Criminal offence buddy :) and no you can not go purchase a bike and ride it around. You are banned from DRIVING
 
Caveat Emptor

You would hope that someone buying a Turbocharged car would be able to spot the warning signs of a duff Turbo. If you don't keep your eyes open and take everything with a pinch of salt, you're going to get burned when buying a used car. If you're naive enough to think that the car is completely fine just because the vendor says it is, you should stick to buying brand new out of the showroom.

How would you suggest Caveat Emptor applies with regards to Section 13 of the Sale of Goods Act 1979 which applies to private sales such as this one? The buyer of that car would have easily had redress under this section. Caveat Emptor is nothing more than an old common law doctrine which has been superseded by numerous statutes.

In any such case, a buyer has far more legal protection when they don't inspect the car at all.
 
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