I also had a Lemon, VW eGolf, although this was painless and they contacted me to handle everything, gave me loaner cars the entire time and actually got me a better deal in the end than what i paid for. So i guess it really does vary dealer to dealer and in which stateSuccessfully Lemon Lawed an '04 Chevy. Rules vary state to state. It took a while to reach the end point, and they will try to wear you down. In the end, even with all the aggravation, it felt good to ram that Silverado up GM's ass.
Not sure if your addressing me, but with my truck I started hearing a ticking sound in the engine. So I had it towed into the dealer. It took them over 60 days to diagnose the issue, and perform the engine replacement. I had a 2018 2500 with Cummins.Which truck and what issues?
From my experience. Lemon law is extremely cut and dry. You either qualify or you don’t. In N.C. it’s 3 trips to the dealer for the same issue or if they keep your truck more then 20 business days within a 12 month period. All I did was call FCA and threaten lemon law and they offered me a new truck. Maybe try that first. Save yourself some time, and energy dealing with a lawyer.Sorry, I was referring to the OP: "With a laundry list of issues and the major safety issue my truck has I have decided to file for a lemon law with an attorney..."
Not sure if your addressing me, but with my truck I started hearing a ticking sound in the engine. So I had it towed into the dealer. It took them over 60 days to diagnose the issue, and perform the engine replacement. I had a 2018 2500 with Cummins.
H3LThis thread is over 2 years old im sure they figured it out lol
Also the 2018 was most likely the plug on the trailer being the old style molded plug that does not work properly in these trucks