Efthreeoh
Active Member
- First Name
- IKE
- Joined
- Oct 30, 2024
- Threads
- 2
- Messages
- 37
- Reaction score
- 30
- Location
- Timbucktoo
- Vehicles
- Fordson
If i was scouts attorney in this stupid lawsuit. I would ask when have you seen a VW dealership selling new Lamborghinis, Porsches, or Audis? Never. Because they are their own brand and so is Scout Motors so we deserve to sell our Off Roaders how we want.
I think the point you guys are missing is Audis, Porsches, and Lambos ARE sold via the franchise dealership model and, as VW AG brands, are not sold via a direct to consumer sales model. Saying VW dealers should now expect to sell Audi/Porsche/Lamborghini product is not what the lawsuit is about. The lawsuit is about a legacy automotive corporation not selling a new brand via the legacy dealership sales/service model.Do VW dealers now assume they should be able to sell Audis, Porsches and Lambos just because they fall under the VAG umbrella. Honestly, as 40+ year VW owner, their dealers are one of, if not the biggest, failure the brand has. As others have said, I’ll cancel my deposit if I need to buy from a VW dealer.
Someone brought up Ford's "mistake" of not selling its Model E division vehicles via direct to consumer sales and using the Ford franchise dealership network. Yet the Mach E is plauged with numerous design and workmanship issues that the direct to consumer sales model couldn't support. It seems Rivian is experiencing such an issue.
And yes, I understand the argument is Scout Motors is an independent American startup, which allows establishment of a direct to consumer sales model, but Uncle VW AG is footing the bill.
Scout Motors has stated 80% of its repair and service requirements will be solveable via software updates. It seems the Scout engineering is following Tesla's concept of a "software-defined" vehicle architecture. We've read on the Mach E forum this doesn't work so well with Ford and the Mach E.
When vechicle fleets owned by the public get into the tens of millions of vehicles in size, the franchise dealership model works better logistically. It will be interesting how the EREV fits into this lawsuit. If Scout Motors decides to use a corporate VW engine as the generator power source (as a lot of members here and the auto media believe), that certainly complicates Scout Motors defense against not using the American VW franchise dealership network.
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