Buster57
Platinum Member
Mike_V said:Sorry, Charliebrn, I don't that is good enough. Why should we have to tip-toe on a tractor, fearing that it might break? Who needs the inconvenience returning the tractor to the dealer for an unnecessary repair (one from a known defect), even under warranty. And beyond warranty, who should have to pay for repairing an obviously defective part?
This may also apply to the incredible repair costs to fix a broken fan, also reported here.
Here's what I'd expect a company like Kubota to do:Kubota has established a good reputation and lots of loyal customers. If they lose that, they may find it would have been better to act proactively.
- Notify owners of a known problem and offer them a kit to PREVENT an unnecessary failure.
- EXTEND the warranty for such a widely reported defect as unusually weak fenders and the extreme cost of repairing a broken fan.
Mike
Mike V you are 100% on target.
What gets my goat is the inconsistency with the BX and other Kubota products. Because I buy a BX, vs a Grand L, I get bad quality. This is my experience. The Grand L had Zero problems. I was spoiled. The BX has every detail- - missing. All the way down to the way no human can read the tachometer. Why even have it on the tractor?
As far as a minor replacement of the fender-the warranty specifically indicates that if something is broken due to manufacturers defect, once the dealer is notified you better not use the tractor before it is repaired because any damage beyond the discovery may be on your dime. If you continue to use it, and the crack in the fender causes something else to break, you are liable. This means you are at the mercy of the availability of the fender and or the scheduling of the dealer. I had to wait two weeks during prime season time. I almost had to rent a New Holland.
Big deal-you bet it is a big deal.