On the honda comment....I am not clear if that was refering to my case only...or everything. It did not make sense to me..so I had her explain it. Apparently..since the motor was operating normally...then the rod became disconnected while the motor was in use..it is not considered a mfr defect....thus not covered...I reeeeeeeeaaaalllly need to know how the rod could become disconnected if the motor was NOT on. Again.. not sure if it is just specific parts...or everything.mike wrote:We had the exact same thing happen to our Honda on our second time out in our newly purchased used 26X (stuck in reverse while trying to pull onto the trailer). It wasn't pretty.
While I am no outboard motor expert, I can't resist trying to ferret out the causes of problems like this, and quickly located it the next day (same thing... shift linkage nut came loose). I reconnected it, and tightened the locking nut... it's been fine ever since.
Regarding Woods: I can't believe they are behaving like this. I'm a graphic artist/prepress guy/web developer/scanner operator/photo retoucher. My time is all I have to sell, and I can't afford to give it away in substantial quantities. But I also recognize that a little unbilled time here and there spent helping clients is not going to sink me, and goes a long way towards building and maintaining goodwill. I could partially understand if it was some major problem that would cost $1000 or so to repair... but to stubbornly INSIST on charging someone $75 for such an insignificant "repair" (especially considering the fact that, as has been exhaustively pointed out, the problem was almost certainly a result of the recent repair job done by this same shop, a point that goes conspicuously unaddressed in the dealer's post in this thread). My guess is that it is a "you didn't buy the motor from us, so we're going to squeeze every penny we can out of you" situation. Either that or they are afraid that by not charging you, they'd be admitting neglect/negligence. Accusing you of loosening the nut yourself is the icing on the cake.
Regarding Honda: this "if a motor fails while it is being used, it is not a defect" thing has to be one of the most ridiculous statements I've ever heard of. Just recite that line in your head a few times and think about it. There HAS to be more to that side of the story... perhaps the customer service person misread the script text on the computer screen, or was misinformed in some other way. I mean, if I buy a brand new Honda, take it out, and a piston rod goes flying through the case, that's not a defect? My Honda's CDI failed last year, and it's safe to say that it happened while the motor was running... was not not a defect either? (it was covered by a third party warranty purchased by the previous owner)
Anyway, our Honda, aside from the failed CDI (which was an intermittent problem that only occured when the motor was run hard for a few hours) and the linkage coming loose, has been a great motor. It's relatively quiet, fuel efficient, and has been perfectly reliable (again, aside from those 2 issues about 1.5 years ago). However, I'm with argonaut... if/when the time comes to repower, though there's a slight chance I'd stick with Honda, I'll probably look elsewhere.
--Mike
I just can not get over that Wood would just not do it as, at minimum, a good will gesture.
I guess they don't want to form long term customers, or have enough customers and do not care. Just bad customer service. Even if they are right...(which they are not IMO)...a 3 minute repair would go a long way to securing a customer and having them recommend them. But I guess pi$$ one off, and have them blow off steam online, and have hundreds of people read it, is a better option....
I should start a website www.woodboatandmotorsucks.com
Paul
