Vince Williams....thumbs down!!!

A young, inexperienced woman purchased a vehicle from Vince Williams Auto Sales and was treated very unethically. She is single and not experienced with purchasing a car. Trusting the salesman she ended up paying thousands of dollars more than the car's value and was convinced to purchase their high priced warranty.

Respond Share Share on Facebook Posted 4 Feb 2010 (401 Views)

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vincewilliams

THUMBS UP FOR HELPING FRIST TIME BUYERS

OUR SALESMAN HELP OUR CUSTOMERS FIND THE VEHICLE THEY WANT AND WHEN THE TERMS ARE AGREEABLE WITH THE LENDER AND THE CUSTOMER WE SELL THE VEHICLE. CUSTOMERS ARE OFFERED A SERVICE CONTACT TO PROTECT THE VEHICLE AND MANY CUSTOMERS CHOOSE TO INCLUDE A SERVICE CONTRACT WHEN FINANCING.PEACE OF MIND IS IMPORTANT.
WE LIVE HERE TOO AND RESPECT ALL OF OUR CUSTOMERS!
VINCE WILLIAMS

Posted 5 Feb 2010 by vincewilliams

over50

Inexperienced Buyer

It sounds to me like this young woman was lucky she didn't go buying in Portland. I'm curious though about the value of the car. What exactly did you base your statement on? If you looked it up on line on kelly blue book then were you looking at what the car would be likely to sell for if it was sold owner to owner? That would be different from buying from any dealer. Are you sure when you specified the condition of the car you were accurate? The value of a used car is a pretty subjective business to begin with.

Posted 5 Feb 2010 by over50

pokergod

I trust Vince Williams

I have bought two cars from Vince wWlliams and I trust them 100%. They also servivce all my vehicale. I have always felt like I was being treated fairly and by them.

Posted 5 Feb 2010 by pokergod

webtoes

Ethics?

Ethics and used car salesmen don't usually go together (LOL).

Seriously though, I haven't bought a car from these people but they do the service on my truck. I've always been treated well and never felt I was getting the run around or being talked into buying something I really didn't need. The cost thing is a puzzle. You can't get a loan these days without the bank knowing everything about the car including the price. Why would a bank take a loan on a car that's overpriced by "thousands"?

Posted 5 Feb 2010 by webtoes

columnclimber

My first car

I bought an old volvo four door from a guy from a classified ad. It looked pretty good and drove okay but it wasn't until I had it for a while that I noticed the fenders didn't match up. I guessed it had been in pretty bad accident and the guy had patched it back together. I ended up replacing just about everything on the engine in the first six months! No lemon laws in those days, no warrenty either. That's my first car. I'm sure your friend won't have the same issues.

Posted 5 Feb 2010 by columnclimber

Questor

Sorry to hear that

based on what I've seen in the past if she really has a problem she should go and talk to the dealer. Make that the owner, not the salesman.

Posted 5 Feb 2010 by Questor

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