Do you think I need to pay ‘mechanical breakdown agreement’?

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Jeff-Ohio

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What I learned from all this:

Best to buy a prior owned Raptor

Happy that I don't live in AZ.

MY Raptor is a 2017 decked out 802A
With 32K miles when purchased. Appears to have never been off road. Interior/exterior like new.

$500.00 state sales tax

$541.93 monthly for 60 months (traded a 2918 XLT 5.0 about a year ago . Financed $30K

Flood Ford Warranty to 75K miles/6 years $100.00 deductible for about $1020.00 (great deal).

Five Star Tune 87 Daily, 87 performance, 89 Daily, 89 performance 91 daily, 91 performance, Ntune gage. Believe it or not, 87 performance is pretty stout. 91 performance is wild. I normally run 87 daily.

40K miles on it now and I have never found anything wrong with it. Best truck I have ever owned. Love it!

The finance manager offered me extended warranty plan which I declined. Someone on this site recommended Flood Ford. Thanks to whomever that was.
I worked endlessly with 5 Star to try and get tunes that would even work. I give them credit for trying, but they were never able to get me anything that ever got the truck performing better than stock. It took them a long time to even get me anything that wouldn't get me killed trying to pull out in traffic. I am currently running MPT with great success.
 

911 Crazy

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I wi) repeat since someone e is trying to justify 500 in paper work charges. The dealer is required by the dealer license to fill out all forms and submit to dmv. If your being charged for it the dealer is ******* I n g you. The paper work and submission is done electronically and saying it takes an army of people to do it is the most asinine statement for 15 minutes of paper work. The detailer porter etc. They charge a dealer prep fee for basically a 995.00 car wash. Yes dealers have many ways to screw the unsuspecting public

Looks like someone ran out of bourbon.
 

BroncoAZ

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I wi) repeat since someone e is trying to justify 500 in paper work charges. The dealer is required by the dealer license to fill out all forms and submit to dmv. If your being charged for it the dealer is ******* I n g you. The paper work and submission is done electronically and saying it takes an army of people to do it is the most asinine statement for 15 minutes of paper work. The detailer porter etc. They charge a dealer prep fee for basically a 995.00 car wash. Yes dealers have many ways to screw the unsuspecting public

Do you work in dealerships? I do in a consulting role for the past 14 years and have seen the ins and outs first hand. Laws and requirements vary by state but there is a lot more than 15 minutes work on the back end. I didn’t even mention the compliance portion of things, most dealers have a third party or internal auditor who inspects a number of deals to ensure compliance with state and federal laws to prevent things like discrimination or predatory lending. A seven dealership group in northern AZ was shut down by the feds last year for not following all of the rules related to transactions involving Native American customers. Another dealer in my town just got hit with a $150K fine from the feds for not having the Moroney sticker visible on every new car sitting on the lot.

Every dealer I have purchased vehicles from in AZ, CA, NV, and CO have had some kind of dealer doc fee that is preprinted on their purchase order. Colorado was the cheapest at $200 in 2008, others have ranged from $400-600. The $500 average in AZ is high, but once the dealer sets a fee they are required to charge it consistently to all patrons or potentially face a discrimination lawsuit. ******* you or not, it’s how business is done in many states. You can repeat your opinion until you’re blue in the face, but you aren’t going to change anything. I’d rather people understand the fee rather than think it’s 100% dealer profit. It may indeed be 50% profit, but my point was that there are costs involved.

In my case the sales tax and vehicle license tax, which will cost me $10K over 7 years, is a far greater concern than the dealer making a few bucks on fees and god forbid holdback. I’m buying my truck from a small market dealer that doesn’t do that much volume. They are making $1000 over invoice, probably $2,000 in holdback, and the ever so horrible $500 in doc fees on my deal. $3500 in gross profit, less in net profit, doesn’t seem out of line on a $63K deal. Most businesses are shooting for far greater than ~5% gross profit. Even at MSRP my deal wouldn’t be more than ~11% gross profit. Dealerships aren’t all crooks, but there isn’t a Red Cross on the side of the building, they are there to make a profit like any other business. In most dealerships the sales department largely breaks even, and their actual net profit is made in service and parts.
 
OP
OP
D

Dongkwan Shin

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I was at dealership for 4 hours. It was not just walked in and buy. The day before, I went and talked to the sales guy and manager for out the door price which did not match at all.

I am still talking with dealership. I decided to keep warranty since it’s official from ford. I am still waiting with the answer for $9,900 worth 37’ tires upgrade. I am starting to get get mad at myself and blaming me. As someone said I signed.
 

No Clue

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4 hours, yikes! I've heard that about San Tan. That they wear you down by keeping you waiting and waiting and waiting.
I went to Sanderson and I was there for about an hour, that included the test drive and getting my trade in looked at. Finance guy offered all the extras, I said no, and he moved on quickly.
My sales guy was top notch. In case anyone else in the is looking to buy, PM me and I'll give you the details.
 

pat247

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At this point, with the information you have supplied, it is hard to know the full extent to what the dealer took you for. You never mentioned what your trade in was. It could have been worth twice what they offered and they were quick to raise it $2,000 when something was said. If the original wheels and tires were beadlocks add $2500.

I hope this comes to a satisfactory agreement between OP and dealership. Good luck.
 

goblues38

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4 hours, yikes! I've heard that about San Tan. That they wear you down by keeping you waiting and waiting and waiting.
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It took me 25 minutes to buy my GTI last month. Didn't bother with a test drive.

When I bought my raptor, i test drove it at lunch, then came back after work and bought it, and my wifes explorer (no test drive) and we were in and out in 45 minutes to close on 2 cars.

I told the finance guy the numbers, he couldn't tell me anything i didnt know. Educated consumers are car dealer worst fear....sadly...the OP proved the point that they prey on those some.
 

smgilles

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I was at dealership for 4 hours. It was not just walked in and buy. The day before, I went and talked to the sales guy and manager for out the door price which did not match at all.

I am still talking with dealership. I decided to keep warranty since it’s official from ford. I am still waiting with the answer for $9,900 worth 37’ tires upgrade. I am starting to get get mad at myself and blaming me. As someone said I signed.


You should be mad at yourself. You signed the papers. Unfortuntely, you are going to own this no matter what. I would think you have little recourse. I get that the dealership completely defrauded you, but they did it with your permission and signatures. You'll end up paying $115k for a truck that is worth $70k at invoice and will only depreciate year by year. You have a wheel/tire package that shouldn't be on that truck in it's current form. I would be beyond irate that they already took the sawzall to your inner fenders without disclosing this to you.

You stated it didn't feel right and the numbers didn't match up. There are thousands of Raptors out there, you should have walked out the door immediately, secured your own financing to give yourself better leverage when heading to the next dealership.

I hope you love this Raptor because you are going to need to be in it for a long, long time to keep from being upside down on this loan.
 
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