Two 2014 Corvettes blow up there motors, with one catching on fire. One car gets brand new motor within a couple of weeks, without any questions asked, including an explanation of what happened while the other car owner gets his warranty claim denied and no explanation why the claim was rejected.
Is there anything wrong here? Most certainly. One car blows up its motor and catches on fire while the owner, under supervision of a professional instructor attends a high performance driver education event and the other car blows up under undisclosed circumstances but with a great deal of suspicion of pushing the car to its apparently very limited limit on more than one occasion.
The common sense would dictate that the owner of the car that caught on fire, nearly killing its occupants would get a speedy and courteous treatment simply due to the fact that brand new cars in their first year catching on fire are as bad of publicity as it can possibly get.
However, this is not what happened in real life. Why did the owner and driver of the fiery death trap got told to eff off while the other car got the white glove treatment?
The answer is rather interesting: one blown motor happened to be in a car used by Car and Driver to conduct its long term test, the other car belongs to a 70-year old geezer who is most likely completing his bucket list that apparently includes experiencing high performance driving in a car constantly advertised by +General Motors as a car just as comfortable on the street as it supposedly should be on a track.
The disturbing part here is the fact that people like this very typical Corvette owner believe words spoken by +Tadge Juechter just about everywhere, including bragging about track times of new Corvette, putting to shame older cars, including actual former track car, C6 Z06. Old people tend to be very gullible, thus, there are plenty of scams intending to take advantage of these people. Unfortunately, the latest Corvette seems to be nothing short of another scam aimed at ripping off old people and cleaning their bank accounts, pretending to sell them a real high performance car, capable of providing them with racing experience.
The truly sickening part here is that Tadge Juechter's father supposed drives the Stingray. What would happen if Juechter's father went through this experience, including seein6-g flames shooting out of the 60k death trap? Maybe the only way anything will change is if Juechter Sr. got his ass roasted in the Stingray? Certainly nobody in GM, including Juechter Jr. give a flying about other senior citizens stupid enough to fall victim to false advertisements.
Realistically, anyone who is 70 or older does not have a lot of time left to waste it in litigation, making their last ride the biggest nightmare of their life. Unfortunately, this is exactly what will happen to this silver haired geezer, teaching him a big lesson. Hopefully, this truly despicable GM treatment and truth about the Stingray will serve as a warning to other senior citizens before they have to run for their lives. This is as disgusting as car business can get and General Motors certainly deserves good ass whooping by a lawyer capable of fixing the damage GM has inflicted on this old guy.
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