I would call the dealership and see if they could work something out with you. * No, not unless the dealership is agreeable as the 72 hour "cooling off" period law does not apply to vehicles.
There is no grace period for returns on new vehicles. You can try talking to the dealership but that is no gaurantee they will help you out.
If they are a name brand I would think you could.
Between 30-50k a year depending on how busy the dealership is, the locations, and if it is a luxury brand dealership.
if it is a car dealership is "concesionario" if you refer to goods dealership is "distribuidor" the brand representative is "representante de la marca"
AutoTrader offers many different sales in many different areas of the world, but if you were looking for a brand new one you may want to try a BMW dealership.
The places that does a tax return online is irs.gov. It is a website that allows you to do a tax return online for free and it also give you a whole lot of different companies to do your taxes.
A Specialist Dealership is where you will find one brand of car (as per any Main Dealership) but will primarily only work on a version of that make. For example Honda make many different models but they also produce 'hybrid' (Electric & fuel) powered vehicles; a 'Specialist Dealership' would primarily only work on the 'Hybrid' vehicles where the 'Main Dealership' would work on all the normal type vehicles but not the 'Hybrid' vehicles.
Try auto zone, or the dealership for your brand of car.
the dealership for that brand of car
The best place to buy a brand new Ford CD player is at the Ford dealership. You can also buy this equipment at places like Amazon and eBay since they are cheaper than a dealership.
All states have a lemon law for new cars - never used cars. If a new car develops the same problem 3 times and can not be fixed, the dealership must provide you with a brand new vehicle.
brock lesnar will not return because he is wiyh another brand