Dealer diagnosis - charge?

Mister_dj

Member
Hi everyone, I have a newbie question!

As I mentioned in another topic, my car now has a slight judder under braking - my best guess is that it's pad compound left in the discs after a session of "spirited driving" which is the cause of the vibrations.

I'd like to take the car to a BMW dealership, as it still is under AUC warranty, to see what can they do about it. My question is whether I will be charged for a diagnosis of the "fault"? Being my first car in the UK, I am not sure how dealers work here, hence the question. If they charge something I will probably just go straight to an independent and fit better brake components.

Happy to hear your thoughts, thanks.
 
If the car has AUC warranty, dealers will not charge for diagnosis provided that the problem is covered by warranty.
 
if its not under warranty - the could charge you to diagnose it, but if you get the work done from them, they should refund it to you against the work being done.

I got charged £250 on my RRS to be told I needed a new Tuner/CD Head unit - an £800 replacement cost - I left it for a week and it started working again. Did I pay the dealer the fee? What do you think......
 
Not so common with modern materials but the disks could be warped.......can't see that being a warranty job myself...but what do I know.
 
Forgot to update this.

I was charged £90 for the inspection, where they saw that I had to buy a new set of discs/ pads, due to corrosion, and this would not wear off with time. This was not covered by AUC, and would cost close to £900. I told them not to do the job, as for that sort of money I can buy better stuff than OEM. However, while I was deciding on what to buy I kept driving it, and after a few brake tests on an empty road, the vibration is gone! I've done 500 miles since that, and the brakes are fine, no judder at all, and with the usual braking power.

Therefore, my feedback from the dealer cannot be positive in this case, as they took money from me and not even did a prover diagnosis. :thumbsdown:
 
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