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Car Warranty Law For Autos Explained

By: Ray Davis

The Car Warranty Law was designed to protect both the seller and the buyer when a car is purchased. It does make for some interesting reading, but it will definitely make you think twice before you buy or sell a car.

If your car is older and doesn't pass the emissions test when you go to renew your registration, be prepared to pay to have the emission controls replaced. It isn't cheap, and you can't do it yourself because in some states you have to prove that you had it fixed by a professional. Since emission controls are the parts of your car that limit how much carbon your car puts out into the universe every time you take a spin, consider your repair bill as your contribution to saving the ozone layer. Or if you live in California the smog index may just drop a degree or two.

If you buy a new car and go to get it registered and it flunks the emissions test, it important that you know your rights under the new car warranty law. It mandates that the manufacturer must repair or replace the parts that control the emissions coming out of your exhaust system. In addition to emission control the manufacturer is also responsible for the smog your car causes if you live in California. When the mechanic is finished fixing that problem, the new car owner gets a complimentary smog control certificate.

Part of the new car warranty law requires that manufacturers provide a certification with the new vehicle. This certification requires that the car be operable and that it has been tested for quality control of various important components that keep the car running such as the engine, transmission and other parts.

What's really interesting about the quality control test, which is needed to certify a car, is that the manufacturer performs it on his own cars in order to give himself his own certification. However, is not clearly defined whether or not this certification gives the buyers some recourse of action if they experience problems with the car. This part of the new car warranty law doesn't name any specific parts, how rigorously they should be tested, or exactly what the manufacturer is looking for when he tests important components. But, as long as the paper is issued, the car is certified.

A person who is selling a used can give the buyer any type of verbal guarantee about repairs, but before the money changes hands all seller has to do is take a bottle of white shoe polish, paint "As Is" on the windshield and tell the buyer although it is now an "As Is" deal, he'll still help with repairs. Of course the seller takes the money and later on doesn't do a thing to help the buyer. Believe it or not, the car warranty law recognizes that even though the buyer was obviously sold a lemon, the shoe polish sign on the car supersedes any other agreements made before the sale of the car and will hold the buyer responsible for all repairs.

In order to have coverage on the auto if the sales persons makes oral implications or promises to repair certain aspects of the used car should it break down or need repair, the buyer must have the person write the specific information onto the car warranty area of the purchase contract.

The first thing a car dealer does when he gets a trade-in for credit towards the purchase of a new car is to have his mechanic look at it. The dealer wants to get rid of the car as fast as possible and has his mechanic fix the cosmetic problems but not the real ones that will probably have the car breaking down completely in two months. If the dealer goes ahead and knowing leaves out this information when he is selling the car he is breaking the car warranty law. This has to do with the fact that if you know the car is headed for the scrap heap and sell the car anyway, the buyer has the right to sue. As well if, the dealer hands out a warranty that doesn't have anything to do with what he knows is wrong with the car he is selling in the first place, he can be sued for that as well, because the seller has represented the car as having warranty that really doesn't cover anything. Read more car warranty tips and advice at http://www.carwarrantypolicies.com

Restoring salvage vehicles that have been written off as a total loss isn't a hobby for everybody, but if restoring cars is your true passion and you know your way around the local salvage yard to get parts, by all means go to an insurance or police auction and buy a salvage vehicle. You already know that because of the car warranty law you'll only receive a salvage title but all that this means is that no warranty can ever be issued on the car. All you need is to find the right car, work on it for six months and then when it is street ready, go get your insurance, license plates, and registration.

Under car warranty law, car rental companies may sell their out of commission cars to the general public with a warranty, which must be extremely limited because of the high mileage on the car. This might not be a good buy for a regular person, but it might be a good deal for an employee. Most major car rental companies sell off theirs cars every year when the new models come out. If you've worked there a year, you've seen the people who drive the cars. Talk to the mechanic and pick out the car you think has the least hot rod miles on it and you might just luck out and get a good deal.

Article Source: http://www.articlegoldmine.com

Get a good deal on your car warranty by doing your research with car warranty comparisons and look around at car warranty companies

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