MisterMac
1000 Posts Club!
So, my paint isn't perfect as it has some peeling on my bumper and my first round chip spot on the hood, but there was never any guarantee it would be perfect. Like the rest of the car, the paint came with a warranty, and as with any other part under warranty, the manufacturer is obligated to honor their promise to repair it or replace it. I trust Kia will repair what is wrong with my paint as long as it is under warranty, and I am thankful. To be provided a loaner during the time I am without it is an added bonus. But, to get another $5k gift to boot and an option to have it bought back is amazing and purely a reflection of the Korean culture. If you want an example of what an American company did, simply read this:
"If the paint on your General Motors Corp. wagon, car or truck is peeling, you might be covered by a "consumer action program" in which GM is trying to help customers with the problem.
According to service bulletins being sent to many of GM's 8,900 dealers nationwide, affected vehicles include a wide variety of GM cars and trucks made for the 1986 through 1992 model years. The colors most prone to peel are blues, grays and silvers, according to the bulletins and a company announcement yesterday.
The cause seems to be a glitch in a paint process that excluded an electromagnetic primer, a metal surface treatment, before the application of paint, the service bulletins said. Under certain conditions, such as prolonged exposure to sunlight, a chemical reaction can occur between the vehicle's metal and paint that causes the paint to peel, the service bulletins said.
Cars and trucks less than 12 months old, or with less than 12,000 miles of use, are fully covered by warranty, which means the consumer pays nothing to have the paint fixed, according to a spokeswoman for King Pontiac/GMC Inc. in Gaithersburg. After 12 months or 12,000 miles, affected consumers are being asked to pay a $100 fee for the repair work, the King Pontiac spokeswoman said."
For Kia to offer anything more than to re-paint the car is an incredible gesture of goodwill, for which the possessors of such gesture should be purely thankful. Be glad you purchased a Kia and not a General Motors automobile.....
"If the paint on your General Motors Corp. wagon, car or truck is peeling, you might be covered by a "consumer action program" in which GM is trying to help customers with the problem.
According to service bulletins being sent to many of GM's 8,900 dealers nationwide, affected vehicles include a wide variety of GM cars and trucks made for the 1986 through 1992 model years. The colors most prone to peel are blues, grays and silvers, according to the bulletins and a company announcement yesterday.
The cause seems to be a glitch in a paint process that excluded an electromagnetic primer, a metal surface treatment, before the application of paint, the service bulletins said. Under certain conditions, such as prolonged exposure to sunlight, a chemical reaction can occur between the vehicle's metal and paint that causes the paint to peel, the service bulletins said.
Cars and trucks less than 12 months old, or with less than 12,000 miles of use, are fully covered by warranty, which means the consumer pays nothing to have the paint fixed, according to a spokeswoman for King Pontiac/GMC Inc. in Gaithersburg. After 12 months or 12,000 miles, affected consumers are being asked to pay a $100 fee for the repair work, the King Pontiac spokeswoman said."
For Kia to offer anything more than to re-paint the car is an incredible gesture of goodwill, for which the possessors of such gesture should be purely thankful. Be glad you purchased a Kia and not a General Motors automobile.....