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Maha
18th November 2013, 15:40
How long is that for, generally?

fetchfire
18th November 2013, 15:45
Usually a year, but its pretty limited. You have to have maintain the bike properly etc.

For BMWs I think it is 3 years. For huskys I heard 2 years. But those are from American sites, I don't know if it applies.

Maha
18th November 2013, 15:46
Small print eh?...service intervals etc.

pritch
18th November 2013, 16:15
If you've been dealing with the same shop they should treat you right. I only once ever had a warranty problem on a Honda and the
local dealer sorted it and loaned me bikes while we waited for Blue Wing to get the part.

Maha
18th November 2013, 16:25
I have not a problem, just couldn't find my warranty policy manual that came with the bike...I now know it has a 24 month warranty attached.

AllanB
18th November 2013, 16:29
2 years should be standard on a road bike. How come we accept this when cars get 3-5?

Low volume sales I guess.

SMOKEU
18th November 2013, 16:32
2 years should be standard on a road bike. How come we accept this when cars get 3-5?

Low volume sales I guess.

Mitsubishi has a 10 year/160,000km powertrain warranty, so bikes should have at least half that.

onearmedbandit
18th November 2013, 16:45
CGA over rides any manufacturers warranty anyway. F&P have a 12mth warranty on their goods, this has been over ruled before as a $2500 fridge should last longer than 12mths.

AllanB
18th November 2013, 16:49
CGA over rides any manufacturers warranty anyway. F&P have a 12mth warranty on their goods, this has been over ruled before as a $2500 fridge should last longer than 12mths.

Potential pain in the butt through the CGA though while they determine what they think an acceptable life for your bike is. Consumer Magazine think the extended warranties are a rip-off as most purchases are covered by the CGA as you note.

Robert Taylor
18th November 2013, 16:52
Potential pain in the butt through the CGA though while they determine what they think an acceptable life for your bike is. Consumer Magazine think the extended warranties are a rip-off as most purchases are covered by the CGA as you note.

Budget for warranty comes out of the manufacturers profit, which is not guaranteed if sales are lethargic ( as they have been ) Yes we could all have cradle to the grave warranty but you'd end up paying more for product, in one form or another. Already, its a pretty tenuous balance

nodrog
18th November 2013, 16:56
aprilia had 4 year warranty years ago, but I think that was just the waiting period for the parts.

nzspokes
18th November 2013, 16:57
Are warranty's on new bikes transferable to a new owner?

AllanB
18th November 2013, 16:59
Our of interest what's the 'warranty' on the Gold Springy stuff Robert? Never bothered asking as I assumed by your rep any issues would be addressed professionally. I'd presume shock issues usually surround leaking seals? Or butchered parts from ill treatment!!! (not covered under any form of warranty).

G4L4XY
18th November 2013, 17:01
Hyobags have a Two year / 20,000km factory warranty.

Hitcher
18th November 2013, 17:19
If it hadn't been for the threat of the Consumer Guarantees Act, an Aprilia manufacturer's warranty would have been worthless which, I guess, means that it was.

Road kill
18th November 2013, 17:32
If it hadn't been for the threat of the Consumer Guarantees Act, an Aprilia manufacturer's warranty would have been worthless which, I guess, means that it was.

The only bike I've ever bought new came with no warranty what so ever,,,in 1973.

Cars would have longer warrantys simply due to their not being as stressed as bikes.
In every day use a bike engine is asked to do a lot more than any car engine,plus their exposed to everything.
Cars on the other hand are seldom asked to do much and the main parts are well protected from the elements.

Mind you,when I buy my Rocket it better come with at lest two years or I'm going back to HD.

Trade_nancy
18th November 2013, 17:33
Yes, usually warranty is transferred to subsequent owner(s).... was in my case - Triumph. Sold by dealer though. I dunno if private sale is different.
Any warranty claim is 1st subjected to check on eligibility - ownership must be proven - and if the fault is of serious mechanical nature - manufacturer will expect service dealer to have sighted proof of servicing according to schedule. So if your motor say throws a rod - and your service book shows you didn't have it serviced by a manufacturer approved service provider, they have the right to refuse the repair under warranty.
All the in warranty service that is required adds up to a pretty penny. In my case - previous owner spent approx $800 on the 1st two. I spent $800 on the 3rd. Another is scheduled while it is likely still under warranty - about $500 for that at a guess - so service cost of $2k...inside 2 years and 25,000km. But a blown motor is plenty more than that.

R650R
18th November 2013, 18:32
Are warranty's on new bikes transferable to a new owner?

Usually yes. Mate had a new head for his second hand 2008 R1 about 3 months before the warranty was about to expire, valve went wobbly and nearly dropped into cylinder!!!
Done two claims with Suzuki and it was like getting blood out of a stone, steering damper and front sprocket cover...

Robert Taylor
18th November 2013, 18:32
Our of interest what's the 'warranty' on the Gold Springy stuff Robert? Never bothered asking as I assumed by your rep any issues would be addressed professionally. I'd presume shock issues usually surround leaking seals? Or butchered parts from ill treatment!!! (not covered under any form of warranty).

5 years against manufacturing defects ( not wear and tear )

scott411
18th November 2013, 18:40
2 years unlimted KM's is about standard on most new road bikes over 250cc, with factory recomended servicing intervals,

nzspokes
18th November 2013, 19:03
Usually yes. Mate had a new head for his second hand 2008 R1 about 3 months before the warranty was about to expire, valve went wobbly and nearly dropped into cylinder!!!
Done two claims with Suzuki and it was like getting blood out of a stone, steering damper and front sprocket cover...

Really? that surprises me. But I would guess the dealer approved services would still need to be proven.

JafaSaffer
18th November 2013, 19:06
How long is that for, generally?

Ducati = 2 yrs and they are very good.

Laava
18th November 2013, 21:52
aprilia had 4 year warranty years ago, but I think that was just the waiting period for the parts.

Plus heaps of them were already 4 yrs old by the time they sold.

Gremlin
19th November 2013, 00:59
2 Years on BMWs (bloody USA gets more, plus you can get extended warranties too). Also goodwill warranty after that on a case by case basis, subject to issue and other factors (mileage, service history).

Often in the fine print to maintain that warranty the bike must be serviced as per schedule by an authorised service agent.