Gary_in_Indiana
Elite Member
- Joined
- Apr 22, 2002
- Messages
- 3,373
- Location
- Fort Wayne, IN
- Tractor
- John Deere 4200 MFWD HST w/ JD 420 FEL w/ 61" loader bucket & toothbar & JD 37 BH w/ 12" bucket
Re: The truth: 4310: the good, the bad, mostly ugl
<font color=blue>"Most farmers and people who buy tractors expect to get scratches on it anyways so as long as there are no huge gouges we never worry about them"</font color=blue>
Most everyone expects the car and especially the work truck they buy to get scratches. They go immediately to the jobsite or, much worse, the parking lot at the mall or restaurant. That's no reason to lower expectations for quality of paint, fit and finish on something new for over $25,000.00. Why should a tractor be different?
You say that you "pay for reliability and ease of use (on a tractor)." Do you not want or expect the same things of a new car or work truck?
You say that you "could care less if there was a ton of scratches as long as the machine did what (you) ask of it." MAYBE I could live with that IF I were compensated for it. I'm paying for new and I want it to look like new.
If you'd accept the kind of damage to paint and finish on a new car or truck that Bill got on his 4310, you'd be the ONLY purchaser of a new vehicle I've heard of doing so in my twenty-five years in the business.
With all due respect, you may well be that one, single, sole, solitary exception. You were certainly right in that Bill has the right to expect it to have perfect paint. I disagree that it should be incumbant on him to let the dealer know that. To me, that should be understood, not something requiring special instructions. Maybe my business is different, but I don't have to be told that a customer expects a new $25,000.00 purchase not be dinged, nicked, scratched and scraped when he comes to take delivery.
<font color=blue>"Most farmers and people who buy tractors expect to get scratches on it anyways so as long as there are no huge gouges we never worry about them"</font color=blue>
Most everyone expects the car and especially the work truck they buy to get scratches. They go immediately to the jobsite or, much worse, the parking lot at the mall or restaurant. That's no reason to lower expectations for quality of paint, fit and finish on something new for over $25,000.00. Why should a tractor be different?
You say that you "pay for reliability and ease of use (on a tractor)." Do you not want or expect the same things of a new car or work truck?
You say that you "could care less if there was a ton of scratches as long as the machine did what (you) ask of it." MAYBE I could live with that IF I were compensated for it. I'm paying for new and I want it to look like new.
If you'd accept the kind of damage to paint and finish on a new car or truck that Bill got on his 4310, you'd be the ONLY purchaser of a new vehicle I've heard of doing so in my twenty-five years in the business.
With all due respect, you may well be that one, single, sole, solitary exception. You were certainly right in that Bill has the right to expect it to have perfect paint. I disagree that it should be incumbant on him to let the dealer know that. To me, that should be understood, not something requiring special instructions. Maybe my business is different, but I don't have to be told that a customer expects a new $25,000.00 purchase not be dinged, nicked, scratched and scraped when he comes to take delivery.