Do I quilify for the Lemon Law?

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I purchased a used automobile with no warrenty. It was "As Is" as well as after owning it for about 2 weeks it breaks down as well as needs a brand new tip finish of a motor. Am we means to aspire to any kind of chance for a repairs or a car?

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Comments (8)

Yes you can. You can take it to a shop (which you should have done before buying) and get an estimate for repairs. Then you decide if you want them to fix it. Once that is decided and it is fixed, you pay them for the repairs and drive the car. The seller has absolutely no responsibility to do anything for you. As-is and no warranty mean just that.

Nope.

Your car is not covered under factory warranty, which DQs it from Lemon Law coverage.

Your only right is to reach for your wallet and pay for the repairs on your own. Well, that should not be the case because you should have had a professional inspect before buying, but oh well…live and learn.

What did your independent mechanic say? You know, the one you had examine the car, for a small fee, prior to your purchase. Did the mechanic uncover anything needing repair?

Nope. You answered your own question…

"I purchased a used car with no warrenty. It was "As Is"…"

Lemon laws protect the buyers of NEW cars from serious, recurring defects. Defects = warranty repairs.

As is means just that. Any problems are your responsibility.

Lemon Laws apply to new vehicles. I’m not sure why consumers seem to completely lose the ability to use their brain when it comes to buying automobiles. Where exactly, are you finding a different interpretation for "As Is" other than "AS IS" ??
Did the warranty say "As Is except when.." or possbily "As Is but not what you think" or did it simply state in clean english "AS IS"

it depends what type of car you talking about and what year.
Yes you do, but you should of inspected first before you bought it so then won’t be any hassels.

As is! You bought a used car so the only thing you can do is pay for the repairs yourself.

when you bought the car "as is" what did you think that meant?

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