
I agree with English! Would be nice to get somewhere! However, I am a guarded pessimists until at least one person gets satisfaction. I have been off line for awhile looks like the post is alive and well. Sadly looks like we have a few more realizing the fast one that was pulled. It is also annoying to see thoes of us who CARE still have a following of naysayers, police, PSA personnel, and granny driving special people. (Bless your heart) Never mind that it can and will most likely hit the one's affected in the pocketbooks when we go to resell. Also, forget the fact this was false advertising and sets a precedence for manufacturers to continue such practices.
sounds great please keep us informed of the out come and possible process for resolution thank youGood points, your more knowledgable about cars, than most chickadees.
I just got a phone call from Mike Byerly Peak CEO, he want to talk about his progress with Kia in the morning, so I will post what I hope is good news in the morning..
I will do.sounds great please keep us informed of the out come and possible process for resolution thank you
Pure speculation, but I see a couple of problems here.
First, Kia is not a performance company from a marketing standpoint. Sure, they got Biermann and Shreyer to build a great car to help raise Kia's flag, but the advertising people are not used to dealing with performance-oriented customers, nor are Kia dealers or Kia salespersons. It is a new ballgame to cater to up-scale performance-oriented buyers. They innocently believed that a 130mph speed limit was no big deal and they did in fact print that information on brochures. Nothing was "hidden," it was simply not recognized as a determining factor.
Second, most car salespersons are not car people, they are sales people. They sell vacuum cleaners one month, computers another and cars another. Most are somewhat hyperactive personalities who do not have the self-discipline or take the time to really learn their product like an enthusiast buyer would, or the time to learn competitors products. They sell, period. And while salespersons are not inherently dishonest, there is always the "lie by omission" which means that you tell the customer what (s)he wants to hear -- the truth, and nothing but the truth, but not the whole truth which may include negative information about your product. Lawyers do the same thing in the courtroom.
So I don't see the speed limit as something that Kia intentionally shoved onto their customers with the intent to defraud. And I don't see it as some insidious ploy by dealers to shove "crippled" cars off onto their customers. To most buyers, the limit is meaningless. To a few, it matters more in terms of knowing the car can go 167 and the (probably) false promise of a slightly higher resale value. In reality, most likely no dealer accepting a trade-in will ever care if the car only goes 130mph, and the Kelly Blue book value of Stingers will be linked to trim levels, not OEM tire selections. And of course most of us who are law-abiding citizens and mature drivers will never see anything above 130mph.
Now who is speculating.
If you believe that people buy stingers with no consideration to how fast it will go, then I figured out what happen, you got lost, and the Rio forum is looking for you!Read my first line, please.
Caveat emptor. If you believe a salesman, or if you fail to RTFP (Read The Fine Print) when you sign a contract, you get that to which you tacitly agree. I'm sorry you think you've been screwed. Ask your attorney if you have a case. The information has always been there, they're just using bigger letters now.
Just like you said ! If they were not trying to screw somebody it would not have been in the FINE PRINT. IF IT WAS EVEN THERE, I have the paper work I SIGNED, it didn't mention it.Salespeople are snakes and never to be trusted or believed, I'll agree to that. The idea that Kia corporate went out of their way to plaster "167 MPH" everywhere they possibly could then "innocently believed" 130 was sufficient is nonsense. At the time of launch they knew exactly what they were doing to save about $200 per unit with cheaper tires and once people caused a stink they made sure to get the "fine print" a little more noticeable to avoid future hurt feelings. They did what every corporation does, get away with something shady until it's no longer deemed worthwhile then change. And still all they changed was making sure people know about the 18" caveat. Ideally the goal will be for them to just put higher rated tires on the car and eliminate the need to have two separate speed governors in the first place. Time will tell if they do this for the 2019 MY.
I dont believe the Man that sold me my stinger, was dishonest at all. Until I know for sure I'm going to say he had no idea, the car was being misrepresented.I think lumping in all salespeople because of the acts of some isn't very productive. I sold cars for a bit and was completely honest and new all abut my product line. Most of the salespaople here at our Kia dealership aren't all that knowlegable about their product, but are also not dishonest about it. I think the bad ones are fewer than say 20 years ago.
In my home town we are still looking for a car salesman that sold a van to the deacons of a local church . Then two weeks later it got a FLAT tire.That kind of condescension isn't very productive, and I don't know where you "come from" but I'm pretty sure there's nowhere in America in 2018 where you can just punch out a car salesman because you didn't read the fine print, which is exactly why you're playing this by the rules and getting a lawyer.
Ok now I'm messing with you..In my home town we are still looking for a car salesman that sold a van to the deacons of a local church . Then two weeks later it got a FLAT tire.
What page in that book is that, never seen the book, I wonder why sales people knew nothing of it. Very curious, thanks.




That's nice, they had NO brochures, books, flyers, DVDs, or oil paintings. That even insinuated that the speed was changed. When I bought the car. Now I didn't write that in fine print. Is it so hard to believe that someone had a different buying experience than you. The sticker in the window said nothing about it, ( I've already but a picture of it on here) read the small print, speed change is not on there.The brochure that I assume every dealer had for the Stinger - I got mine early, before the US cars arrived (but the Korean spec cars were in the showrooms) iirc. The two different dealers I have visited for test drives also offered one to me - which I declined as I had one already.
It's about 30 pages, very nicely printed, contains lots of great info about the car and its development. The comment about reduced top speed in on the color and wheel selection page, second-to-last (pages are not numbered).
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