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It may in fact void a factory warranty. Certainly, undercoating will. It's not needed anymore, and if not absolutely correctly applied, it will cause pockets were moisture can collect. Toyota will not warranty for sure.
It is solely there for dealer profit. Just like doc fees. They are not required, and I won't pay. Ever.
The response to any attempt to sell a paint treatment is, "Oh? The paint on these cars is so crappy I have to pay extra to keep it on? I'll buy another brand, then." - exit, stage right.
Quote:
Originally Posted by unit731
In some areas there is a 2nd MSRP sticker for all of this and these dealers will not sell a vehicle without buyer paying for it.
Yes, some areas have dealers that have gotten so arrogant that they pad out every sale with this junk, and consider it their rightful due. You're a cheap, stupid fool for even questioning it.
Walk. Better yet, don't ever go to a dealership for a car. It's not like you have to check it for brown spots and worms.
The response to any attempt to sell a paint treatment is, "Oh? The paint on these cars is so crappy I have to pay extra to keep it on? I'll buy another brand, then." - exit, stage right.
This, all day every day. Same with every other warranty and add-on the F&I Guy tries to talk you into.
I knew a guy in a body shop once who called this type of thing "Polyrazzmatazz". Huge profit center, and totally un-needed. Keep the bird poop, bugs and tree sap washed off it, wax it if you're afraid of acid rain, and drive it. The clear coat they're putting on new cars these days (from the factory) is light years ahead of the paint used even twenty years ago.
but you can do the same aftermarket/car shop for about $100-150 twice a year. At $3000 you could do this for a decade yourself... by that time, the car paint wont matter
I'm not even sure it qualifies as that - it is not any kind of hard-shell coating. They are all more like a wax/penetrating sealant/Armor All conditioner that can be sprayed on and wiped down without any significant masking or finish work. A top-grade synthetic wax, properly applied, is probably the equivalent.
When I bought my last new car, a 2015 Toyota, they tried to sell me something like that. I figured if I wanted to do it myself, with a name brand polish, it would have cost a couple hundred dollars over the years. "Oh no, this is much better than your (name brand) treatment. And when you trade it in, you'll get most of that back, because we know your paint will be much better." Of course I said no. I also said no to their super-duper fabric protection, their free windshield replacement and a bunch of other stuff.
I did take the life insurance for my loan, because I have trouble getting life insurance, but it was later denied due to my age. (I was 69 at the time, and they told me they couldn't sell it to anyone over age 65, iirc.) They also offered all kinds of extended warranties at that time.
It wasn't even offered by my car salesman. Instead, they had an "expert" that I had to listen to after the deal was made. Everything would be added into my loan, so each item was only a minimal monthly amount. It was mostly bull. I did take an extended warranty for my traction battery, because I figured I'd be trading/selling the car at around 65K-100K and that a new owner would be concerned about high mileage on the expensive Prius battery. I'm still driving the car, now with over 100K miles on it, and I might continue driving it for another 100K miles. (It's been a great, totally trouble-free car!)
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