El Toro
Innocent Bystander
During this spring market I went through a process of trying to sell my FJR AE (posted on forum, on ebay, and consignment with Yammy dealer), then decided to keep it, and then eventually traded it. There were a couple of things I thought I would share about how the Y.E.S. contract played into this.
1. I bought the Y.E.S. contract with the idea that it would be a valuable feature when reselling. When I put the bike up for sale this spring, it had 3 years and unlimited mileage remaining on the contract. The Y.E.S. contract did not come up as an issue. When the bike was on consignment at the dealership, the sales manager did not even tell the other salesmen about it. When I was offering it for sale with the Y.E.S. contract as a feature, offers were still down near the trade in value for a bike with no Y.E.S. contract. I think that on resale, just like every other farkle out there, the farkles are orphans, and folks hope to get them without spending any extra money to buy the bike.
2. Before the trade process last week I read the Y.E.S. contract in detail, and I discovered that the owner could cancel the contract at any time. The fee to cancel would be a $25 administrative fee, and the original premium would be pro-rated according to the date of the cancellation. All you had to do was write a letter to the dealer who sold you the Y.E.S. contract asking to cancel, and enclose the contract with the letter. Since in my discussion with the trading dealer the Y.E.S. contract did NOTHING to improve my position in the trade, I took it out of the deal. Instead I planned to cancel it and get my pro-rated refund. The trading dealer didn't care, and in fact, I think they would rather sell the buyer a new contract and make some money, rather than transfer an old one.
3. I called the Y.E.S. dealer where I'd bought the contract to give him a "heads up" that the contract was coming for cancellation.
He told me "You can't cancel it unless you've totaled the bike. Yamaha won't let us cancel the contract unless you provide a copy of the police report."
I read him the contract language, and he turned me over to his paperwork person. The paperwork person agreed with the contract language, and told me to follow the directions in the contract, and that a refund would be issued.
I wonder if other folks have been told they couldn't cancel?
I guess my thought on this is that buying the Y.E.S. contract may be a brilliant move for someone who tends to keep bikes for a long time, or for lots of miles.
Someone like me who tends to keep bikes for less than two years, and rarely puts more than 10,000 miles on any individual bike, is probably wasting money buying any extended warranty, including Y.E.S. I am chalking it up to tuition.
I'd never bought an extended warranty before. I'm going back to my old policy on these. Your mileage may vary.
1. I bought the Y.E.S. contract with the idea that it would be a valuable feature when reselling. When I put the bike up for sale this spring, it had 3 years and unlimited mileage remaining on the contract. The Y.E.S. contract did not come up as an issue. When the bike was on consignment at the dealership, the sales manager did not even tell the other salesmen about it. When I was offering it for sale with the Y.E.S. contract as a feature, offers were still down near the trade in value for a bike with no Y.E.S. contract. I think that on resale, just like every other farkle out there, the farkles are orphans, and folks hope to get them without spending any extra money to buy the bike.
2. Before the trade process last week I read the Y.E.S. contract in detail, and I discovered that the owner could cancel the contract at any time. The fee to cancel would be a $25 administrative fee, and the original premium would be pro-rated according to the date of the cancellation. All you had to do was write a letter to the dealer who sold you the Y.E.S. contract asking to cancel, and enclose the contract with the letter. Since in my discussion with the trading dealer the Y.E.S. contract did NOTHING to improve my position in the trade, I took it out of the deal. Instead I planned to cancel it and get my pro-rated refund. The trading dealer didn't care, and in fact, I think they would rather sell the buyer a new contract and make some money, rather than transfer an old one.
3. I called the Y.E.S. dealer where I'd bought the contract to give him a "heads up" that the contract was coming for cancellation.
He told me "You can't cancel it unless you've totaled the bike. Yamaha won't let us cancel the contract unless you provide a copy of the police report."
I read him the contract language, and he turned me over to his paperwork person. The paperwork person agreed with the contract language, and told me to follow the directions in the contract, and that a refund would be issued.
I wonder if other folks have been told they couldn't cancel?
I guess my thought on this is that buying the Y.E.S. contract may be a brilliant move for someone who tends to keep bikes for a long time, or for lots of miles.
Someone like me who tends to keep bikes for less than two years, and rarely puts more than 10,000 miles on any individual bike, is probably wasting money buying any extended warranty, including Y.E.S. I am chalking it up to tuition.
I'd never bought an extended warranty before. I'm going back to my old policy on these. Your mileage may vary.
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