Warranty - to renew or not to renew

RSavage

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Just been invited to hand over £321.42 for warranty for the next year on my 2011 R12 GSA.

What's the consensus of opinion? Money well spent or a waste of money?

My dealer said it is a waste of money.

Richard
 
In my opinion a waste of money. I paid a similar amount for 3 years. If we are talking Mondial, their terms and conditions on what is covered is subject to their interpretation. I had a small value claim and they rejected it.

Better putting the £300 in a savings account every year, in case you get a big repair bill.
 
Just been invited to hand over £321.42 for warranty for the next year on my 2011 R12 GSA.

What's the consensus of opinion? Money well spent or a waste of money?

My dealer said it is a waste of money.

Richard

Extended mine following the 2 year warranty expiring - I went the BMW route for a similar price and as the year ends have I wasted my money because nothing went wrong?

As AA says, if it came to it and something expensive or inexpensive (all got our own values) fails/breaks, can you cover the cost without a problem - I think I could, but I'd rather pay the premium and use the potential repair money by sitting around a pool in a hot place.

Another bill , but I would only be able to prove its worth after time.
 
I've never bothered so I'm over a grand better off now as nothing's gone wrong and mine's been out of warranty for four years now. That's sitting in an ISA working for me instead of being part of some corporations P&L account. I do my own servicing as well so can double that figure. That can easily pay out now for anything that requires replacement including FD, Clutch etc etc.

If you're risk averse than take it out but its like gambling ... most punters never win over time.
 
I never pay for extended warranty on anything - you'll save a fortune and they are always overpriced.

The 3rd anniversity of the extended warranty offer for my GS comes up early next year and I still haven't paid a penny on breakdowns. Even if the final drive goes you can get it fully rebuilt for £400.

Peace of mind ? - there are more important things in life to worry about.
 
I'm inclined to go with the 'save the money for something that might not happen' approach. Yes I can afford to cover the costs out of pocket. And, by not being subject to the Ts + Cs of the warranty I can have the bike serviced by Brian Giles without worrying about the warrantors refusing to pay out. My breakdown cover is provided via my Carole Nash policy so I don't need that bit of the warranty.

Ta

Richard
 
I would say if you do heavy mileage it would be worth it, less than a quid a day & if you go overseas bmw assistance is pretty good.i swithered aswell and thought 1 more year and 6 days later the final drive needed rebuilt so this year it paid off.if you only do a couple of thousand a year, stick the dough in your account.:D
 
I would say if you do heavy mileage it would be worth it, less than a quid a day & if you go overseas bmw assistance is pretty good.i swithered aswell and thought 1 more year and 6 days later the final drive needed rebuilt so this year it paid off.if you only do a couple of thousand a year, stick the dough in your account.:D


Indeed. The bike sits - unloved - in my garage for 11.5 months and then has it's neck shaken round Europe. There are a couple of outings in UK but, basically, I hardly use it.
 
I guess it would also depend if your livlihood was affected by any breakdowns and the speed of any repair. I'm lucky in that mine doesn't plus I have a second bike to use if one's being worked on.
 
£100 ish of that £321.42 is for European cover, which you dont have to pay for if you dont want it. Also good to note that once you lapse the BMW warranty then you cant have it again. Also, if your bike is little used (as is mine) then thats when seals are likely to fail. I witnessed my 2008 20,000 mile beauty broke in two in the workshop whilst the seals were replaced under warranty. Glad I did not have to pay a penny for that:bounce1

For £200 quid ish, I would like the peace of mind - but thats for you to decide:rob
 
Never had warranty on my 05 gs. But it wasn't new when I bought it. Maybe the older ones are better than the newer ones? :rolleyes:

It's Tapatalk. Get over it.
 
I tend to just insure things that I couldn't afford to replace or pay for.
Therefore my house is insured, my Audi is insured, but my bike and land rover are just TP.

I'd never buy a warranty for anything. Apart from anything else, they seem to carry so many exclusions and evasions they're hardly worth having.
 
Indeed. The bike sits - unloved - in my garage for 11.5 months and then has it's neck shaken round Europe. There are a couple of outings in UK but, basically, I hardly use it.

That probably isn't the best recipe for making a reliable bike, long term :(
 
That probably isn't the best recipe for making a reliable bike, long term :(

Indeed it isn't. The paint is already falling off the block and BMW say that the cause of it was brake dust corrosion!!! So you can understand why I'm a little sceptical about insurance-backed warranty.

Richard
 
I would say if you do heavy mileage it would be worth it, less than a quid a day & if you go overseas bmw assistance is pretty good.i swithered aswell and thought 1 more year and 6 days later the final drive needed rebuilt so this year it paid off.if you only do a couple of thousand a year, stick the dough in your account.:D

That is pretty good advice.

The BMW branded extended warranty is reasonably broad in its cover, adding in the extra benefit of very good (compared with many) European recovery, too.

Insurance of this type, is not a gilt edged investment; if nothing goes wrong, then it returns absolutely zero. If something serious does happen, then it may well return in spades.

It's also a partial fallacy that you can pay three hundred (the equivalent of the annual premium) into a bank account each year and obtain the same result. OK, it works if nothing significant happens; but if your final drive fails on day two, you'll be stumping up more, say £600 for a big job. So, you'll have to bring forward the three hundred pounds you had earmarked for next year into this year and still have to pay £300 into your bank account next year, assuming you still own the motorcycle... Oh, and if you are truly wise, you'll need to add in three hundred again for this year, in case you have a second calamity after the first.

This proposition is supported by Stolzy's reply that he only insures what he cannot afford to pay for in full out of liquid cash.

If he has, in this example, £600 in cash available and if he is reasonably sure nothing else will go wrong and/ or that he will not suddenly have to spend the £600 on a new front door or replacing the ignition system on his car... Or if it does, that he can cover two £600 eventualities... Then indeed going self-insured makes excellent sense.

If you are less certain that you can make a £600 cash call to repair your motorcycle and still have funds to go on your 0.5 of a year holiday on your motorcycle then extended warranty may well just become your very best friend.

You pays yer money, you takes yer choice. There is no absolute right or wrong definitive answer. Only time and your wallet will tell you whether what you (not another fellow) decided to do was right.


For what it's worth, I had excellent value out of mine, more than once. Recovery in France, a new final drive, a new radiator... And probably a bit more. I do lots of miles in a year, almost exclusively outside of the UK. The pence cost per mile for me is manageable, I'll spend near enough on fuel just on one or two decent jaunts than I will in a year of extended warranty cover.
 
Much sense spoken here for and against, I take extended warranty ,cost over a year is negligible. Paid up for 18months, nothing then rear ESA shock packed in, money recouped. Noticed all weep back of gearbox, not had it checked yet but may need a new clutch. Worth every penny at this rate. Motorcycling is my greatest pleasure, (just checked that Julie wasn't reading over my shoulder ) as someone said at a pound a day it's not expensive for a little peace of mind. These 1200s are a little more fragile than the 1150. Tha knows:rob
 
Its a gamble...

I extended the warranty on my 09 GSA for an extra 2yrs, at a total cost of £660.
A few weeks ago i traded the bike in, for a new 90th Edition GSA :cool:.

Did i need that extended warranty?....No. That old GSA gave me 30k miles of total reliability...:thumb

Will i extend the warranty on my new bike when the time comes? Probably not.
 


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