1049910
Also, if the dealer gives you crap tell him/her/it you're calling the Better Business Bureau (did I spell that
right?).
There are some cases where the dealership may be right. For example, a few years ago my dad put a
tighter suspension on his ford exploder. Within a month the windshield cracked. It was not covered
under warranty because the frame wasn't designed for tighter suspension, it torqued too much, and
cause the windshield to crack. In all fairness, that's not something the dealership should have to cover.
So even though it is not "directly related" like raising a jeep over 4" without lowering the transmission, it is still
cause and effect.
How close are you to 36k miles? Take a road trip or two...
Or, take the time between now and may to lay things out, do lots of research, scrounge for parts, and
have everything in place for when the warranty runs out. Make sure you have all the tools, parts, fluids,
instructions, everything. While you have everything torn apart, take advantage of it and treat the frame
and drivetrain with some sort of rust protectant (POR-15, etc).
Hell, use the willingness to wait as a negotiating point. "okay Dad, I'll wait till the warranty expires, but in
return I'd like some assistance ($$$ or logistical) planning out my modifications so they are done right..."
or something like that.
Waiting sucks, but its not like you have to wait till the end of summer, do the mods, and then wait for next
summer to take the top off get muddy.
There I go, rambling again.
Cooper.[addsig]