whatever the dealership was using. all oil changes were at the dealerOK what oil was he using?
whatever the dealership was using. all oil changes were at the dealerOK what oil was he using?
Says the dealership did the oil changes.OK what oil was he using?
I believe they investigated the driving habits once the engine failed and warranty was in question. During an oil change I bet they don't bother looking at the history.I wonder if the service location, which has so much collected data, advised the customer that they were not following the correct OCI based on usage? Yes, Mazda can always say "it's in the manual", but if they're going to use the data to deny a claim, they should also be using it to protect the customer from such inevitable premature failure.
I don't know what telephone gaming means exactly but an engine in a 2023 model that was likely manufactured and sold in 2022 that has 29k miles total accumulated in 2-3 years getting 5600 mile intervals with dealership 0w-20 can't possibly be sludged or at most have a slight bit of varnish. Mazda corporate is just being ridiculous.Maybe he's telephone gaming their description of "sludge."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telephone_gameI don't know what telephone gaming means exactly but an engine in a 2023 model that was likely manufactured and sold in 2022 that has 29k miles total accumulated in 2-3 years getting 5600 mile intervals with dealership 0w-20 can't possibly be sludged or at most have a slight bit of varnish. Mazda corporate is just being ridiculous.
True, but the problem is if they want to deny you, they will find a way. I've dealt with this in the past with family member vehicles even being dealership serviced to the T. What it comes down to is they have better lawyers than you, so they bank on most people just not wanting the headache. Insurance companies are the same way.This why I video my oil changes and keep receipts. Also why I won’t run an oil that hasn’t spent the money for approvals. “Trust me” it’s great oil that exceeds won’t mean squat to a paper pusher looking to save the company.
I bet it's gunky. But Mazda is being asinine.I don't know what telephone gaming means exactly but an engine in a 2023 model that was likely manufactured and sold in 2022 that has 29k miles total accumulated in 2-3 years getting 5600 mile intervals with dealership 0w-20 can't possibly be sludged or at most have a slight bit of varnish. Mazda corporate is just being ridiculous.
That's the sad reality, and the car sits, and sits until the owner decides if he's going to eat the loss or fight it in court. An engine is not small claims court so a lawyer will probably be needed, and they don't work cheap. Bottom line, odds are the owner walks away losing.True, but the problem is if they want to deny you, they will find a way. I've dealt with this in the past with family member vehicles even being dealership serviced to the T. What it comes down to is they have better lawyers than you, so they bank on most people just not wanting the headache. Insurance companies are the same way.
The CX-50 was actually on my short list for a new vehicle. Not any more.
Worth it if I can live in infamy on bitog forum doing 30k oci's on straight HPL unicorn blood.