So are the days of Sears.Lifetime warranties can have different meanings and have specific requirements. Often it refers to the typical expected lifetime of the product.
https://lifehacker.com/money/how-long-do-lifetime-warranties-actually-last
You used to be able to return a broken Craftsman hand tool regardless of age to Sears for an exchange without a receipt. Those days are long gone.
Yeah I'm pissed about the Craftsman tool exchange. There's a website where you're supposed to enter the part# off the tool in order to still exchange it. Well the 3 broken ratchets don't register on the website so I'm SOL. Granted said ratchets are north of 20 years old but damnit I still want my free replacement!
Where you get yours?Friends don't let friends buy parts from AutoZone, especially electrical parts....just sayin.
I'm an OEM guy, especially when it comes to electrical and cv axles. I will buy aftermarket pads and rotors, fluids, etc. But that's about it. Talking about my personal vehicles with that statement. Customers at the shop get choice of oem and aftermarket. I will give a longer labor warranty on OEM parts however. Up to customer how they wanna spend their money, not me.Where you get yours?
I think it is a dice roll. Needed a crank sensor for a Dodge. Ugh a Dodge. One cheapo, one from Napa, 3 from dealer before we got a good one.Friends don't let friends buy parts from AutoZone, especially electrical parts....just sayin.
I can agree. But I purchased the part from them in the Mopar bag.Just because you get your vehicle fixed at the Dealership doesn’t mean you’re getting OEM.
Wouldn't an 02 have the 3400 or 3800? The 3800 is notorious for eating ignition modules.'02 Impala LS 3.6l w/300k on the odometer.
Just remember in a lifetime warranty, its for the life of the company, not the part. Or the owner. Now that Craftsman exists in name only, those true Craftsman made wrenches no longer have a warranty because the company that made them is gone.Yeah I'm pissed about the Craftsman tool exchange. There's a website where you're supposed to enter the part# off the tool in order to still exchange it. Well the 3 broken ratchets don't register on the website so I'm SOL. Granted said ratchets are north of 20 years old but damnit I still want my free replacement!
Yes, my bad, typoWouldn't an 02 have the 3400 or 3800? The 3800 is notorious for eating ignition modules.
Warranties depend on the person at the counter as much as store policy. They (stores) all waffle back and forth on it. I worked at an oreillys a while in school and their policy expressly didn't cover pads wearing out but the local policy was always warranty it because having crackheads do all their buddy's cars with the same parts as they wore out from normal use and warranteeing it every 3-6 months was better store policy than making anyone buy things.
Most cases are lifetime warranty of the original part, replacement part has 12, 6, even 3 month warranty on it. Usually if you escalate to a manager or threaten to call corporate they'll relent.
When I worked at the shop, I had someone want to warranty a set of brake pads because they wore down to the backing plates evenly because we put them on and had a lifetime warranty. Yea, manufacturer defect warranty. They're not warrantied against wearing out in 80k miles. Congrats on getting good life out of them, here's cost for new ones.