BigGuy82
Well-known member
I keep reading and hearing about new coach issues and it always amazes me that they always end up being the dealers fault. Granted there are problems at the dealership level, but if HL and other manufacturers would start doing a decent job of quality control many of these problems would be solved. It is not the dealerships responsibility to have to correct sloppy manufacturing.
I agree and I don't agree.
The dealer didn't do a poor job of manufacturing - BUT - they also choose what brands to sell. If a product is routinely shoddy, then it is also the dealer's fault because they keep selling those known defective products to us.
The dealer didn't do a poor job of manufacturing - BUT - it is clearly thier job (we paid them to do it when we bought the coach) to do a proper PDI and to correct everything that they find to be wrong. Some of the stories you read here clearly indicate the dealer washed the unit, registered it and hooked it up to the buyer's truck. Hardly what you'd expect from a proper PDI.
The dealer didn't do a poor job of manufacturing - BUT - they do get paid by the manufacturer to do the warranty work correctly.
Here's the bottom line of this thread - the manufacturer doesn't do a good job of delivering a quality product and then the problem is compounded by a dealer who doesn't do their job. At the end of the day, the dealer has their $$$, the manufacturer has their $$$ and we have that tunnel that goes into the mine - the shaft.
Nobody is there to help - RV'ers don't hold enough votes to motivate any politician and don't hold your breath waiting for a longer warranty ... why would a manufacturer extend a warranty when they are already selling all of their production? What's the motivation for that?
Overall, my dealer and Heartland have very good performance records. Of course there are problems, but when compared with some others that are out there, the Bighorn is a Cadillac (or Mercedes or BMW or whatever top end you choose to compare to). I'm happy with my choice and hope that I can say the same a year or ten from now.