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Kramer
Kramer Dork
5/15/18 7:08 p.m.

To me, lifetime warranty means if the product has a manufacturers defect that causes it to fail during the agreed-upon terms (usually explained on the customer agreement paperwork, aka receipt), then it should be replaced for free.  

If the item wears out, that is not a defect of the manufacturing process.  

No receipt to prove the agreement, no warranty.  There are stipulations for a reason.  And I should have a responsibility to withhold to meet the warranty requirements.  And accountability if I don't.  

Ford used to deny warranties if you didn't use 5w20 oil, as specified.  Even if it was hard to find.  Too bad.  You bought a Ford knowing it took a hard-to- find oil, you knew how often you had to change it, and you knew you had to prove you did all this per Ford's warranty requirements.   I don't blame Ford for denying a warranty if I didn't uphold end of the deal.

Valvoline had a 300,000 mile warranty available for free, just by registering and following their requirements.  I bet most people who signed up didn't follow these requirements.  Not the fault of Valvoline. 

Many warranties only offer one replacement.  Why?   Very doubtful two items in a row will fail due to a manufacturers' defect.

Appleseed
Appleseed MegaDork
5/15/18 7:18 p.m.

Doubtful of 2 in a row? You've never dealt with a Car-Done rack-n-pinion. 

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