Suspect steering to Audi A4 following accident repair

I recently had a minor dispute with a lorry whose rear wheels scraped along the side of my Audi A4. This necessitated a respray of the offside of the car and replacement of various trim components. The offside front wheel also suffered a knock and this upset the steering system, which was supposedly rectified by the replacement of a number of links in the suspension system. The repair was handled my Norwich Union's authorised repairer and took a lengthy 29 days (could it be they obtained a kick-back from the loan car hire company?). On initial collection I rejected the repair because they had omitted to respray the chipped door mirror. Whilst this had been on their job sheet it had somehow been overlooked. After a few days I noticed further problems, namely wind noise from the driver's door due to poor window alignment, the driver electric window mechanism catching as the window was wound up and down, and the steering feeling odd on sharp right hand cornering. I took the car back to the repairer and the first two problems were rectified. However, they were unable to find anything wrong with the steering. When I make a tight right hand manoeuvre at relatively low speed, such as in a car park, the steering wheel offers no resistance and feels as if it is pulling towards the right. This is accompanied by a scrabbling sound from the tyres. The car did not do this before the accident. Given the repairer's poor quality control I am reluctant to accept their assurance that nothing is wrong. Should I get the car independently checked, if so by whom? Presumably I should inform the repairer of this and expect them to pick up the tab if they are shown to be negligent. Should I inform the insurance company of my concern, if so at what stage?

Reply to
Typo
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Now. ask for an independent engineers report as you are not happy with the safety, put this in writing by recorded delivery

Reply to
mrcheerful

As I work in a body shop you must assume I am biased and as we also had a passat in with a strange suspension problem which we are still trying to cure then I am probably even more biased but here goes any way. First go back to the repairer and insist that they check out the problem properly and also insist that they supply you with a courtesy car as they have not repaired your car correctly. Also inform your insurance company and insist that their engineer inspects the car whilst at the repairers and also tell the insurers that you have little confidence in the repairers and want an independant report privided by (and payed for) by the insurers before you will accept your car back. There is also an insurance ombudsman scheme for motor insurers which you can contact if required. You own insurance company will give you details of how to contact them. A second option is to complain to Norwich Union and insist that another approved repairer or possibly your (trusted) vw dealer rectifies the problem at their expense and again insist on a replacement vehicle until you are happy that your car is repaired to your satisfaction.

Hope this helps

Radar

Reply to
radar

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