
Thanks for any help!
No problem.clazzdev wrote:Thanks for the input, KuroNekko! I've seen a number of your posts while lurking, so I appreciate you stepping into this thread. If a Kizashi has been sitting at a dealership, are the recall issues things that the dealer would've taken care of on their own, or would I have to get them resolved?
I understand there are large number of happy Kizashi owners that have run into no issues, while there are small, but vocal amount of others who have had terrible luck with their vehicles. As of now I really like the Kizashi, but I'm just terrified of purchasing it and ending up with a lemon less than a year later.
And thanks for providing Bootymac's guide - I'll sift through all of that later tonight
I very much doubt it. You should make it a point of the deal that you get new rear shocks with updated bump stops, spider eviction, and shifting out of park services done BEFORE you sign for the car.clazzdev wrote:If a Kizashi has been sitting at a dealership, are the recall issues things that the dealer would've taken care of on their own, or would I have to get them resolved?
That is true of every car, no, every thing in the world. And more of it has to do with the operators than it does the individual cars. You're taking a little more risk with a Suzuki because of the company leaving North America, but you're getting a $20K car for $13K, stick your neck out a bit.clazzdev wrote:I understand there are large number of happy Kizashi owners that have run into no issues, while there are small, but vocal amount of others who have had terrible luck with their vehicles. As of now I really like the Kizashi, but I'm just terrified of purchasing it and ending up with a lemon less than a year later.
Why did you go in so early? You had 200 miles left.Ronzuki wrote:If by chance the selling dealer is an ex-Suzuki dealer and current Suzuki service center, as stated, get the work done before signing. If not, I'd get whoever to knock a grand off the car for the rear shocks alone. Bring the TSB, on here somewhere, along and throw it down as a negotiating chip. I would have had to pay $850 to get the work done if the 3yr/36k B2B warranty hadn't covered it. Had it done at around 35,800 miles.