- Jun 16, 2020
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As previously posted, in April I purchased a new, 2023 MG ZS Exclusive. I am well aware it is a comparatively cheap car so I don't expect high end Volvo or Jaguar at the price I paid. And so far I have been very happy and it has lived up to my expectations.
However, there are two problem areas that I would have thought were both minor.
First, on starting, the lights default to auto. So it is fair to expect not to get headlights and fog lights in daylight. Research shows this is a common issue fixed with a new sunshine sensor.
They first booked me in for a Saturday morning, 'while I wait', appointment. On arrival, I am told they cannot do diagnostics on a Saturday. And I may have to wait until 1 pm. plus, the right technician was not in! I was not best pleased.
They rebooked, This time they called me to say it all worked properly, and that they had had it in a dark workshop to test !! Though they had done an electrical reset which may have fixed any issues.
I took it home and it was no different, so I went back and insisted they looked at it with me there. In daylight, I started the car and asked them what lights were on. Again they tried to tell me it was 'the norm' and all I needed to do was to manually switch them off and on. I said this rather defeats having auto lights.
They ordered the sensor.
I then complained that the cruise control had gone faulty. Clicking the speed down in 1mph increments only worked intermittently. I took the manager for a test drive to demonstrate. Rather than admit there was a fault, he argued it was normal for this car. He volunteered to show me on another car. I said that was pointless as if the fault was on that car it just shows it is on both and that they are both wrong. I refused adamantly, to accept that it was 'the norm for this car'.
I have clearly told them I will return the car for a full refund if they cannot get it to operate as the handbook says it should.
Why do they think it is a clever thing to try to persuade a customer to accept clearly faulty operation? Surely, if they worked with me, they could actually get paid for correcting genuine warranty issues.
John
However, there are two problem areas that I would have thought were both minor.
First, on starting, the lights default to auto. So it is fair to expect not to get headlights and fog lights in daylight. Research shows this is a common issue fixed with a new sunshine sensor.
They first booked me in for a Saturday morning, 'while I wait', appointment. On arrival, I am told they cannot do diagnostics on a Saturday. And I may have to wait until 1 pm. plus, the right technician was not in! I was not best pleased.
They rebooked, This time they called me to say it all worked properly, and that they had had it in a dark workshop to test !! Though they had done an electrical reset which may have fixed any issues.
I took it home and it was no different, so I went back and insisted they looked at it with me there. In daylight, I started the car and asked them what lights were on. Again they tried to tell me it was 'the norm' and all I needed to do was to manually switch them off and on. I said this rather defeats having auto lights.
They ordered the sensor.
I then complained that the cruise control had gone faulty. Clicking the speed down in 1mph increments only worked intermittently. I took the manager for a test drive to demonstrate. Rather than admit there was a fault, he argued it was normal for this car. He volunteered to show me on another car. I said that was pointless as if the fault was on that car it just shows it is on both and that they are both wrong. I refused adamantly, to accept that it was 'the norm for this car'.
I have clearly told them I will return the car for a full refund if they cannot get it to operate as the handbook says it should.
Why do they think it is a clever thing to try to persuade a customer to accept clearly faulty operation? Surely, if they worked with me, they could actually get paid for correcting genuine warranty issues.
John