Short Version:
I recently purchased a Gen III ’13 from Montana (Forum Member) as a step up from my older but Very Good condition ‘04. Advertised as Excellent Condition. Bought and Shipped to SoCal. 1st impression, very nice but (sinking feeling)… lots of damage not stated in the CL Post or mentioned by seller. No joy. It's all on me, no one forced me to buy... but
Long Version (and I don’t care if this seller is your riding bud or drinking partner 'cause I'm venting.
Was a very descriptive CL Post, and primary for me the condition was noted as ‘Excellent’. Secondarily, it had new tires, shock, recent tuneup and wired GPS. (Only later noticed the Dalton Hwy stickers). I live 1,300 miles south in SoCal. There were more than enough fellow Forumites chiming in that I felt satisfied (loud sucking sound) that this ’13 was, in fact, ‘Excellent’ or very close to it. We chatted, I bought it, shipped here and I’ve been wrenching a bit to get a few items on and off.
I’ve discovered rusted, pitted mufflers, chipped paint, the rear fender has been crudely hacked off (hiding behind an add-on tailpiece), a cracked front fender, long wide scratches in the speedo glass and a 4x2 impression on a side bag. Definite amateur BodyWork. These are not expected wear and tear and not ‘blemishes’. These are damaged items that this guy knew about but deliberately never mentioned.
I suggested either a 'take back' for this Average bike, or a refund since the seller ‘forgot’ to mention all the damage in that lengthy, very descriptive CL post about this (clear throat) ‘Excellent’ bike…. ‘Nope’. I’m sure there’s more to come. Just yesterday, I noticed the front axle bolt was unwound an inch from the fork. AN INCH!. Never torqued after tire replacement…. What’s next? I need to strip the entire ‘Excellent’ bike down to frame and check all bolts, bearings and connections for spec? WTF!#@K
I could have bought a ‘Good’ or ‘Average’ ’Gen III seven days a week within 2 hours of home but I wanted the Wow factor. He says he ‘fairly represented’ the condition simply because ‘some of you <Forumites> agreed with his description’. What?!? Because it was shiney it was therefore excellent? Now he’s playing dumb.
From Kelly Blue Book, Excellent condition means that ‘the vehicle looks new,… needs no reconditioning…. never had any paint or body work and is free of rust.’ When asked about blemishes or anything broken, during the one week ship, he sent a pic of a slight scratch on the nose, as if that was it. The best he can do is refund $100. Gee, what a standup guy.
I recently purchased a Gen III ’13 from Montana (Forum Member) as a step up from my older but Very Good condition ‘04. Advertised as Excellent Condition. Bought and Shipped to SoCal. 1st impression, very nice but (sinking feeling)… lots of damage not stated in the CL Post or mentioned by seller. No joy. It's all on me, no one forced me to buy... but
Long Version (and I don’t care if this seller is your riding bud or drinking partner 'cause I'm venting.
Was a very descriptive CL Post, and primary for me the condition was noted as ‘Excellent’. Secondarily, it had new tires, shock, recent tuneup and wired GPS. (Only later noticed the Dalton Hwy stickers). I live 1,300 miles south in SoCal. There were more than enough fellow Forumites chiming in that I felt satisfied (loud sucking sound) that this ’13 was, in fact, ‘Excellent’ or very close to it. We chatted, I bought it, shipped here and I’ve been wrenching a bit to get a few items on and off.
I’ve discovered rusted, pitted mufflers, chipped paint, the rear fender has been crudely hacked off (hiding behind an add-on tailpiece), a cracked front fender, long wide scratches in the speedo glass and a 4x2 impression on a side bag. Definite amateur BodyWork. These are not expected wear and tear and not ‘blemishes’. These are damaged items that this guy knew about but deliberately never mentioned.
I suggested either a 'take back' for this Average bike, or a refund since the seller ‘forgot’ to mention all the damage in that lengthy, very descriptive CL post about this (clear throat) ‘Excellent’ bike…. ‘Nope’. I’m sure there’s more to come. Just yesterday, I noticed the front axle bolt was unwound an inch from the fork. AN INCH!. Never torqued after tire replacement…. What’s next? I need to strip the entire ‘Excellent’ bike down to frame and check all bolts, bearings and connections for spec? WTF!#@K
I could have bought a ‘Good’ or ‘Average’ ’Gen III seven days a week within 2 hours of home but I wanted the Wow factor. He says he ‘fairly represented’ the condition simply because ‘some of you <Forumites> agreed with his description’. What?!? Because it was shiney it was therefore excellent? Now he’s playing dumb.
From Kelly Blue Book, Excellent condition means that ‘the vehicle looks new,… needs no reconditioning…. never had any paint or body work and is free of rust.’ When asked about blemishes or anything broken, during the one week ship, he sent a pic of a slight scratch on the nose, as if that was it. The best he can do is refund $100. Gee, what a standup guy.
- Shame on me. I own this debacle, I lusted for an Excellent ’13, jumped in too fast and got Average, at best. F@#king RUST and Bodywork?!?
- My trusting nature takes another kick in the balls. Ripped off by a Forum member no less.
- Always Buy Local. Distance Buying, Never!… no matter what is written, said or shown, the seller just might be a deceitful play-it-dumb clown like this guy, so you’re f***ked anyway.
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