During the 18k service on Thursday the front caliper was found to be seized after they removed it to replace the pads.
One overnight stay later and the loan of a brand new RT it was replaced under the warranty. I may have misheard but I'm sure I was told that it would have cost £700. If so then the warranty may well be worth considering.
juniorswailing wrote:
During the 18k service on Thursday the front caliper was found to be seized after they removed it to replace the pads.
One overnight stay later and the loan of a brand new RT it was replaced under the warranty. I may have misheard but I'm sure I was told that it would have cost £700. If so then the warranty may well be worth considering.
This is why I do my own servicing. These bikes are great but they are delicate to corrosion. The brakes are so easy to service and clean that this sort of problem should never have occurred. So too all you non spanner riders I would learn how to do some of the simple maintenance tasks when your bikes come out of warranty otherwise it could be very expensive.
Levisp wrote:
[size=78%]So to all you non spanner riders I would learn how to do some of the simple maintenance tasks when your bikes come out of warranty otherwise it could be very expensive.[/size]
Alternatively, you could just extend the warranty!
You can still fiddle / fettle with your parts, as you wish, with the warranty, but you won't fiddle / fettle a dead electronic computer module back to life for the price of a warranty.
True but I have never had a electronic black box fail. I guess its all to do with perceived risk. Apart from the GS bearing fiasco I have had no issues over the last ten years. If I had been paying for warranty over that time I would have shelled out £3960 using Davids figure of £33/month. So thats money I have in the bank increasing at £396/year. That should pay for anything in the future. This looks like I do not believe in warranties. Well I do for new bikes or secondhand ones I have bought because you do not know their mechanical history. However once I have owned a bike for a year or two you know if you have a good one or a lemon.