Unreliable German Cars

I was only thinking the other day how many people I know who have experienced reliability problems with german cars. Once celebrated for their quality of manufacture, BMWs and Volkwagens seem to break down more often than most, and the repairs are expensive.

We have a Mercedes A Class, which is ideal for driving around London. We use it very little. After more than 3 years the clock shows 17,000 miles. It is well specified, with leather seats, air cooling, and a 1900cc engine. The handling is not too good, but otherwise it is a comfortable car to drive. It is the long wheelbase model, so there is a lot of legroom in the back.

On Sunday I drobe to Winchmore Hill to pick up my 90 year old mother, and take her to look at a retirement apartment in Purley. All was well until the car died in Earl's Court Road. Thank you to the two black guys who pushed us to a side street without being asked. I am grateful to you for your prompt assistance.

My mother and my wife continued their journey in a taxi, leaving me to wait

3 hours for the RAC, who towed the car to Mercedes After-Sales by Wandsworth Bridge South.

On Monday morning at 7.30 Vicky presented herself to the garage - another taxi fare. Later in the day, she was told the car would cost £600 to repair. That was the bad news. The even worse news was the garage would not even consider ordering the part until she returned in person with the vehicle registration document and a photo ID. That would be two more taxi journeys at £16 each way.

Now you might be cross that a spare part cost £400. And you might be cross that this part failed after only 17,000 miles. But you might be even crosser that Mercedes seemed so intransigent.

One might understand their reluctance to order an expensive part with no guarantee we would pay - except that they had our car in their possession.

One might also understand the security aspect. After all, anyone might take our car and present it to the garage for repair. Except that they would have to pay £600 to get it back again, and the car was originally bought from Mercedes Chelsea and was still on their database under our name and address. Oh yes - and Vicky had presented herself in person on Monday morning.

All very strange - but even the General Manager said he had no authority to make any exceptions. As a concession, he did agree to 'break the rules' if we faxed a copy of my wife's passport to him and a copy of the registration document.

Now I used to work for John Lewis as a General Manager, and it was well known by everyone that the General Manager was the one who would do his best to satisfy a customer regardless of what rules might normally apply in general. After all, for the sake orf a relatively small amount of money, I could prevent people writing all this stuff on the Net (as I am doing right now) or telling all their friends over dinner how badly they had been treated.

Goodwill expenditure, as it was called, could settle disputes very quickly and turn wrath into something entirely more positive. This is an example many firms would do well to heed.

Including Mercedes Chelsea.

Reply to
Robert Wright
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I would've bought something a little larger than the A class.

Reply to
Ben

Relevance?

Reply to
Don.

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