Drove to school and work, now currently staring at it through the living room window is she sits outside in the cold weather. I just wish I had a garage.
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2008 Storm Grey SE 4x4
Banks Monster Exhaust
265/70/16 General Grabber AT2
Plasti dipped grille
Custom bumper light bar with Hella Micro FF lights
MOPAR undercoating, 20% tinted windows, hood deflector
Next Mods: Volant CAI, PRG 2"x1.5" lift www.youtube.com/spurly48
Hi: All... Rotated the tires. Headin' on down the highway to Niagara Falls. Told work I have a Psycho-analyst re-assessment appointment at the Casino Dr.'s office. That should work...Ya THINK!!!
CanNissan N.S. of Lake Erie
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Fav. Quote..."Don't take life to seriously...ain't none of us get out of it ALIVE" Bugs Bunny
It depends. If you replace stock suspension parts with aftermarket ones, of course Nissan isn't going to warranty your aftermarket suspension.
Legally they can only void a warranty repair if your lift kit CAUSED whatever issue you are having. And it is THEIR responsibility to show that the lift caused the issue, not your responsibility to show that it didn't. Magnusson Moss Warranty Act. Or from the FTC site (Auto Warranties, Routine Maintenance, and Repairs: Is Using the Dealer a Must?), in layman's terms:
Fifth paragraph: "Simply using an aftermarket or recycled part does not void your warranty. The Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act makes it illegal for companies to void your warranty or deny coverage under the warranty simply because you used an aftermarket or recycled part. Still, if it turns out that the aftermarket or recycled part was itself defective or wasn't installed correctly, and it causes damage to another part that is covered under the warranty, the manufacturer or dealer has the right to deny coverage for that part and charge you for any repairs. The FTC says the manufacturer or dealer must show that the aftermarket or recycled part caused the need for repairs before denying warranty coverage."
TRUE....if you are talking about a manufacturer's warranty. if you are talking about an extended AFTERMARKET warranty, they can tell you to GFY for any reason they like. Magnuson-Moss doesn't apply to those.
TRUE....if you are talking about a manufacturer's warranty. if you are talking about an extended AFTERMARKET warranty, they can tell you to GFY for any reason they like. Magnuson-Moss doesn't apply to those.
You're absolutely right. Thank you for the clarification.
Wiped off the driver side cv since it's developed a leak. I'll hold off a lil bit longer until I have to get the oil changed
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2011 Nissan Frontier Crew Cab Short Bed SV 4x4
Current Mods: OEM Hood Protector, Vent Shades, Bed Extender, Nismo Rays in the Garage
full wash/vacuum over the weekend, added 5 25lb sandbags today and plugged it in last night for the first time! cut warm up time in half
I had heated leater in my last car, and decided against it for the Fronty, but now I'm wondering if I made the right choice, heated leather in the winter is the bee's knee's.
Drove it to work, watched the crack in the windshield get bigger...
Quote:
Originally Posted by Taylo.Made[07]
I had heated leater in my last car, and decided against it for the Fronty, but now I'm wondering if I made the right choice, heated leather in the winter is the bee's knee's.
It depends. If you replace stock suspension parts with aftermarket ones, of course Nissan isn't going to warranty your aftermarket suspension.
Legally they can only void a warranty repair if your lift kit CAUSED whatever issue you are having. And it is THEIR responsibility to show that the lift caused the issue, not your responsibility to show that it didn't. Magnusson Moss Warranty Act. Or from the FTC site (Auto Warranties, Routine Maintenance, and Repairs: Is Using the Dealer a Must?), in layman's terms:
Fifth paragraph: "Simply using an aftermarket or recycled part does not void your warranty. The Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act makes it illegal for companies to void your warranty or deny coverage under the warranty simply because you used an aftermarket or recycled part. Still, if it turns out that the aftermarket or recycled part was itself defective or wasn't installed correctly, and it causes damage to another part that is covered under the warranty, the manufacturer or dealer has the right to deny coverage for that part and charge you for any repairs. The FTC says the manufacturer or dealer must show that the aftermarket or recycled part caused the need for repairs before denying warranty coverage."
thank you for this. i have now bookmarked that page so that in the future, after ive done and left the dealership. i can still get my **** warrantied after lift install (on that fancy hypothetical truck i dont own yet)
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