Interesting that they have enough data analysis to deny a warranty claim based on short tripping.
Amazing how much data they can collect."it is also very concerning how much data my vehicle was collecting while I owned it" exactly why I refuse to get rid of my old trucks.
I don't think the service interval has anything to do with it. there was a defect in the engine and the manufacturer used that as an excuse to get out of paying.I wonder what the actual failure mode was. Any vehicle that would fail in warranty from 5600 mile oil changes, severe duty or not, is simply a vehicle not worth owning.
Although warranty is seldom worth the paper there written on.
Thanks for sharing OP. I hope it makes its rounds on social media.
Probably, but it is going to cost that guy a fortune in repairs, or for an attorney. Pick your poison. I'd carefully trash Mazda every chance I got if that were my car.I don't think the service interval has anything to do with it. there was a defect in the engine and the manufacturer used that as an excuse to get out of paying.
Maybe he's telephone gaming their description of "sludge."How does an engine possibly develop these "hot spots" because the oil isn't warmed up. It's thin enough to where it can get to where it needs to be without being fully warmed up and oil provides cooling.
I suspect they outright lied to him and made up some bs about the engine being warped from hot spots and blamed the customer going a bit over the interval as the reason. Screw mazda I would never buy their junk if this is what they will do to me as a customer because they can't build a half decent engine.