Rcjohnson10
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- Jul 22, 2013
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I took my 2009 Genesis Sedan into my local Hyundai dealer this past Friday
to have four new tires mounted (their recommendation). Car is immaculate.
I paid for the work, and when I got home, I noticed that all four rims were gouged
and scraped, on every spoke, and in a consistent position. These were the original
stock rims and were immaculate before I brought he car in (NO curb rash). The
service manager said immediately he could tell it was from a machine, since black
plastic was embedded in the gouges. He then took me back to the tire changing
machine and actually showed me how it worked. He picked up a rim that was laying
on the floor, set it on the machine, put the top down on it and rotated the wheel.
It quickly became apparent that the lip of the unit was dragging across the rim scraping it as it went. He admitted the machine was defective, and told the others to take it out of service until it could be fixed. Back to my issue: their suggestion was to have a local wheel repair company "fix" my four rims (sand, paint, fill, clear coat, etc.). I contend that they will never look as they were and asked if they could source four new 2009 rims or pull them off another 2009 Genesis to replace mine.
My question is, how good are these wheel rim repair jobs and should I hold out for
replacement rims at the dealers expense?
to have four new tires mounted (their recommendation). Car is immaculate.
I paid for the work, and when I got home, I noticed that all four rims were gouged
and scraped, on every spoke, and in a consistent position. These were the original
stock rims and were immaculate before I brought he car in (NO curb rash). The
service manager said immediately he could tell it was from a machine, since black
plastic was embedded in the gouges. He then took me back to the tire changing
machine and actually showed me how it worked. He picked up a rim that was laying
on the floor, set it on the machine, put the top down on it and rotated the wheel.
It quickly became apparent that the lip of the unit was dragging across the rim scraping it as it went. He admitted the machine was defective, and told the others to take it out of service until it could be fixed. Back to my issue: their suggestion was to have a local wheel repair company "fix" my four rims (sand, paint, fill, clear coat, etc.). I contend that they will never look as they were and asked if they could source four new 2009 rims or pull them off another 2009 Genesis to replace mine.
My question is, how good are these wheel rim repair jobs and should I hold out for
replacement rims at the dealers expense?