Bmr tubualar K member welds breaking?
#181
Super Hulk Smash
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I'm not wrong. BMR's site confirms what I said on warranties. Also, what I state is automotive regulations. BMR doesn't have to pass crash tests or anything else with their parts. It is truly caveat emptor. You buy an aftermarket part, you should know the limitations of it.
#182
TECH Junkie
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Join Date: Jul 2005
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Did you miss the previous post where BMR said they'd fix your current k-member for free? They are trying to work with you. To me the issue is solved... toss the k-member in a box and ship it. Is this not good enough?
#183
TECH Fanatic
iTrader: (8)
http://www.bmrsuspension.com/index.cfm?page=disclaimer
#184
TECH Enthusiast
iTrader: (1)
I'm not wrong. BMR's site confirms what I said on warranties. Also, what I state is automotive regulations. BMR doesn't have to pass crash tests or anything else with their parts. It is truly caveat emptor. You buy an aftermarket part, you should know the limitations of it.
This isn't limited to F-Bodies - I've seen failures on reputable Jeep tubular UCA's too. They are a great vendor, and have hundreds, if not thousands, of units out on the road. Failures happen, period. It's up to you to decide if you can live with it. I can't live with the UCA snapping on my Jeep on the e-way. I CAN live with it happening when I am crawling at 10mph on a trail. My vehicle is 99.9 road use - therefore, I live with a smaller lift and forego the benefits of a tubular UCA.
People just assume if it's for sale, it's guaranteed for all usage types, which is not the case. Do you really think a company like BMR, UMI, Founders, etc has the R&D money an OEM does? Do they subject vehicles to extreme usage testing? Do they crash test them? I work for an OEM, and I've seen the "shake tests" that are done on new vehicles to check for quality and durability in design. I don't really care if a vendor calls it "road use" or "offroad only" - is it DOT certified? If not, my guess is it's not subject to the same regulations and "recall" requirements an OEM is.
Again, that's not a knock - these tubular products are great and I am very happy that we have vendors willing to provide great aftermarket solutions, but buyer beware - make sure you've thought through your usage on these parts, and if you are running them, they need to be inspected regularly (not necessarily continually, but regularly).
Guys seem to forget that the race teams that use performance parts perform ridiculously short maintenance/inspections on their vehicles. John Q Public wants to emulate and have similar performance on his vehicle and just buys the stuff and then runs it on the street for years without a second thought.
Cliff's notes: Just consider your usage and purchase accordingly. There's no such thing as free lunch - everything comes with a tradeoff. Sorry, but I don't subscribe to the "more is better, because racecar" mentality. I buy what I need and what will work best for my usage - which sometimes is buying nothing at all and sticking with OE components.