17Magnetic5.0
Well-Known Member
- Thread starter
- #1
So I’ve seen a lot of issues now and I’ve always wondered what happens to a car that has had a short block or long block put in. Surely the value of the car has to go down or am I wrong? If it does who pays for that, I feel that it should be ford. I know sometimes they will offer people extended warranties or something like that but what if they already have an extended warranty.
I’m asking because if I ever have an issue with my 2017 that’s a cpo I would at least want that difference in depreciation back. For example I paid for my car through ford financing and paid for a car with no mechanical issues at the time, and I’m fine with that but if an engine replacement has occurred and depreciation affects the car then it’s not my fault, it’s ford fault and I shouldn’t have to pay for all of that depreciation caused by ford. Now to the point I made earlier maybe warranties offset depreciation for some folks but I already have a cpo car and bumper to bumper warranty to 75000 miles. I would only be happy if ford did one of three things
1. Let me use whatever payments I’ve made towards a new car
2. Reduced total loan amount to reflect depreciation
3. Gave me ford performance parts with signed documents that they would still honor all my current warranties.
Basically with all the issues I’ve seen thus far if anything were to go wrong in the future, hopefully it doesn’t, I want to know what the best course of action would be.
I’m asking because if I ever have an issue with my 2017 that’s a cpo I would at least want that difference in depreciation back. For example I paid for my car through ford financing and paid for a car with no mechanical issues at the time, and I’m fine with that but if an engine replacement has occurred and depreciation affects the car then it’s not my fault, it’s ford fault and I shouldn’t have to pay for all of that depreciation caused by ford. Now to the point I made earlier maybe warranties offset depreciation for some folks but I already have a cpo car and bumper to bumper warranty to 75000 miles. I would only be happy if ford did one of three things
1. Let me use whatever payments I’ve made towards a new car
2. Reduced total loan amount to reflect depreciation
3. Gave me ford performance parts with signed documents that they would still honor all my current warranties.
Basically with all the issues I’ve seen thus far if anything were to go wrong in the future, hopefully it doesn’t, I want to know what the best course of action would be.
Sponsored