Perhaps it should have been expected with Mercedes-Benz’ ties to Chrysler, but it appears that the Mercedes-Benz GL-450, released during the summer of 2006 has the same quality problems that plague many of the US car-makers.

When you pay for Mercedes-Benz quality, one would expect a transmission to last more than 60,079 miles.  For the GL-450, apparently that is not the case. According to BrumosMercedes-Benz, they have seen this occasionally, but not often.  One would think that even “occasionally” would be too much for Mercedes-Benz to tolerate.  For a “gear” to just “disintegrate” after 60109 miles and destroy the transmission, something is wrong with the quality of the Mercedes-Benz gear.

Perhaps now that Mercedes-Benz has dumped Chrysler, things will improve, but an $8000 [the final bill was $7848] transmission for an expensive car with 60079 miles on it is not the kind of quality that I want to waste my money on in the future.

Please note that this is not a reflection on Brumos in Jacksonville – everyone there has been helpful and friendly, but their hands seem to be tied by poor Mercedes-Benz quality.  Perhaps Brumos could have been expected to go the extra mile to get it covered, but perhaps not.  (If you are looking for a car, talk to Scot, he is always great!).  Brumos Mercedes and Mercedes-Benz should have stepped up to the plate on the cost.

We’ll see how many people stop considering Mercedes-Benz at Brumos Mercedes after reading this.

9/1/2009 update:  After telling a neighbor they are no longer considering a Mercedes-Benz.  There goes one new GL450/GL550 sale.  Hopefully that was worth it.

9/14/2009 update: Two more neighbors (who currently own Mercedes’ that were purchased at Brumos) heard about what happened this weekend and were both disappointed in both Brumos Mercedes Benz and Mercedes-Benz itself for not standing behind their products.

Brumos says there is a Mercedes program that handles this in some cases, but not here.



Today I got a call from 904-287-5727, Zero-Res in Jacksonville, Florida.  This wasn’t your typical call, it was a pre-recorded sales pitch for a company that had not been out to clean my carpets in about 30 months.

To make matters worse, they called on my cell phone.  And to further complicate matters, Zero-Res in Jacksonville apparently ignored the Federal Do Not Call list (which my cell phone is listed on) which requires a business relationship within 18 months.

Talk about a way to not win customers loyalty – ignoring the Federal Law, doing a pre-recorded message (FTC prohibited without a business relationship in the last 18 months), and doing it on my cell phone where I have to pay for the minutes!

Come on, if you want to win customer’s loyalty, treat them how you would like to be treated?  Would Zero-Res want pre-recorded calls on your cell phone from EVERYONE you had done business with in the last 3 years?  I seriously doubt it.