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Home | Cars And Trucks


Car Warranty Law For Autos Explained

By: Ray Davis

At first when you examine the car warranty law you might feel a little overwhelmed. However, there are some basics that apply from state to state in the United States in regards to the regulations for car warranty law.

Emission controls are the parts of your car that control how much carbon emission is put out by your auto when you drive it. The majority of these emissions come from the exhaust pipe of your vehicle. Depending on how well your car is running and the condition of the emission control equipment will determine how much carbon emission you are producing per use.

On new cars, the car manufacture warranty is required by federal regulations for every state to repair or replace the emission control components of a car. This ensures that this part of the vehicle is always operating properly. In California, the car manufacturer is also required to cover the smog controls for the car and provide a smog control certification for each new vehicle.

The part of the new car warranty law that require car manufacturers to provide certification sounds responsible on the surface. However the certification is backed up by their own in-house testing which really only talks about quality control of important components. This must give some buyers some sense of security, but it sounds more like someone in Washington had to get a group of consumer advocates off their back.

However, there is no federal regulation over all the exact parts or the amount of in depth testing that must be performed for an auto to be issued a certification. The car warranty law just states that the car must pass quality controls and be certified before it can be released from the manufacturer.

A person who is selling a used can give the buyer any type of verbal guarantee about repairs, but before the money changes hands all seller has to do is take a bottle of white shoe polish, paint "As Is" on the windshield and tell the buyer although it is now an "As Is" deal, he'll still help with repairs. Of course the seller takes the money and later on doesn't do a thing to help the buyer. Believe it or not, the car warranty law recognizes that even though the buyer was obviously sold a lemon, the shoe polish sign on the car supersedes any other agreements made before the sale of the car and will hold the buyer responsible for all repairs.

Most car buyer's don't go to used car lots and believe the sales person when they say, "That's just the battery. I'll have it fixed as soon as you get back with that cashier's check!" They may not be familiar with the car warranty law that protects used car dealers from having to make repairs to the buyer's car unless they are written in the car warranty area of the purchase contract. If the buyer wants to purchase a car that seems okay except for the muffler, they will want the muffler replaced under the warranty. The sales person might write "replace muffler" in the right place on the contract but if the muffler isn't working three months later and you take the car back to the dealer, he may just look at you and say, "I did what you asked, but all I had was an old rebuilt muffler. There's nothing I can do now." Unfortunately, he's right because he fulfilled his written contract. What the buyer should have done differently at the signing of the contract was be more specific. Here's something more like what should have been written on the contract under warranty. "Replace muffler with brand new name-brand muffler within 24 hours of contract signing." You can't be protected the car warranty law unless you understand it.

The first thing a car dealer does when he gets a trade-in for credit towards the purchase of a new car is to have his mechanic look at it. The dealer wants to get rid of the car as fast as possible and has his mechanic fix the cosmetic problems but not the real ones that will probably have the car breaking down completely in two months. If the dealer goes ahead and knowing leaves out this information when he is selling the car he is breaking the car warranty law. This has to do with the fact that if you know the car is headed for the scrap heap and sell the car anyway, the buyer has the right to sue. As well if, the dealer hands out a warranty that doesn't have anything to do with what he knows is wrong with the car he is selling in the first place, he can be sued for that as well, because the seller has represented the car as having warranty that really doesn't cover anything. Read more car warranty tips and advice at http://www.carwarrantypolicies.com

Restoring salvage vehicles that have been written off as a total loss isn't a hobby for everybody, but if restoring cars is your true passion and you know your way around the local salvage yard to get parts, by all means go to an insurance or police auction and buy a salvage vehicle. You already know that because of the car warranty law you'll only receive a salvage title but all that this means is that no warranty can ever be issued on the car. All you need is to find the right car, work on it for six months and then when it is street ready, go get your insurance, license plates, and registration.

Where do those rental cars go when the new models come out at the beginning of the year? In America, they go to the rental car company's used car lot. If you pick up a brochure or go online you can usually find where they are located. This is an interesting situation, because when you go to the lot the cars have been taken such good care of by the company's detailer and mechanics you would swear they had never been driven. Until you look at the odometer. The sales rep will tell you it was only driven by tourists who did a lot of sightseeing so the mileage is highway mileage and not hard on the car. Of course, under the car warranty law, the sales person can sell you a really limited warranty. But all the data of what goes wrong first on each model has got to be on some report at the corporate offices where they draft the warranties and you can bet that none of these things are covered.

Article Source: http://www.aword2thewise.com

Obtain a good deal on your car warranty by doing your research with car warranty comparisons and look for offers at car warranty companies

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