Forum Discussion
troubledwaters
May 17, 2017Nomad
Your post is pretty vague, says nothing about what steps has been taken to date which makes it a little hard to offer help without plowing the same ground over again. If you just contact Keystone and say my TT is damaged it's your fault your probably not going to get much of a response. This is where your dealer comes in - this is why you want to start with a good dealer before you buy.
Your first steps (which I assume you took) should be all in with the dealer. What is the dealer saying caused the problem? Does the dealer concur it a manufacturer defect? Has the dealer contact Keystone on your behalf and explained to them what the problem is (is it documented)? Does the dealer have a name and phone number for the Keystone contact person? Is your dealer trying to actively get this issue covered by Keystone for you? Has Keystone denied? Based upon what?
Posting on UTube is a last resort; you are not going to endear anyone into trying to help you after you tar and feather them. If you have taken all reasonable and prudent steps to get them to cover it and they have said no, then by all means tar and feather them but resolve your going to have to pay to fix it yourself. Or, Take it down and start fresh and maybe change their mind.
My gut instinct tells me your warranty period is over. So now you have to prove the damage was a result of a defect before the warranty expired. Again, this is the dealer's bailiwick.
Your first steps (which I assume you took) should be all in with the dealer. What is the dealer saying caused the problem? Does the dealer concur it a manufacturer defect? Has the dealer contact Keystone on your behalf and explained to them what the problem is (is it documented)? Does the dealer have a name and phone number for the Keystone contact person? Is your dealer trying to actively get this issue covered by Keystone for you? Has Keystone denied? Based upon what?
Posting on UTube is a last resort; you are not going to endear anyone into trying to help you after you tar and feather them. If you have taken all reasonable and prudent steps to get them to cover it and they have said no, then by all means tar and feather them but resolve your going to have to pay to fix it yourself. Or, Take it down and start fresh and maybe change their mind.
My gut instinct tells me your warranty period is over. So now you have to prove the damage was a result of a defect before the warranty expired. Again, this is the dealer's bailiwick.
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