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Our Terms for warranty

Any quote or invoice over $2000 requires 75% Deposit before the engine can progress and parts ordered. Final payment made before delivery or pickup of any engine or parts. Bladmore PTY LTD, ANZ BSB-012243 Account-110740261 Warranty 1 Year or 10,000km

Warranty will be NOT be valid for the following points:

  • -The engine is dyno-tuned or chipped above standard operating specs. or without SES approval in writing.

  • -Running in oil MUST be changed at 500km after any rebuild.

  • -New Injectors and Fuel pumps, Turbo’s need to be replaced or serviced on all petrol and diesel engines.

  • -Oil Coolers, EGR, DPF, Excess build-up of old oil in lines not cleaned, serviced or replaced. Seawater engines warranty,

  • - As the point above.

  • -Transom, leg and water pickups must be checked and clear of any debris or blockage. Performance engine rebuilds

  • -Start-up warranty is provided only if the engine is started and run in under standard operating specifications as per manufacturer's guide.

  • -No other warranty is provided by SES.

In any warranty event or claim Sydney Engine Services reserves the right to use its mechanics and inspectors. If it is found fault to be caused by Sydney Engine Services then these costs will be bound under warranty. If the fault is found not to be caused by factors out of Sydney Engine Services control or knowledge then all costs will be bound to the customer.

 

Thank you for your business and look forward to working with you again. Sydney Engine Service

Terms & Conditions - the basics

Having said that, Terms and Conditions (“T&C”) are a set of legally binding terms defined by you, as the owner of this website. The T&C set forth the legal boundaries governing the activities of the website visitors, or your customers, while they visit or engage with this website. The T&C are meant to establish the legal relationship between the site visitors and you as the website owner. 

 

T&C should be defined according to the specific needs and nature of each website. For example, a website offering products to customers in e-commerce transactions requires T&C that are different from the T&C of a website only providing information (like a blog, a landing page, and so on).     

 

T&C provide you as the website owner the ability to protect yourself from potential legal exposure, but this may differ from jurisdiction to jurisdiction, so make sure to receive local legal advice if you are trying to protect yourself from legal exposure.

What to include in the T&C document

Generally speaking, T&C often address these types of issues: Who is allowed to use the website; the possible payment methods; a declaration that the website owner may change his or her offering in the future; the types of warranties the website owner gives his or her customers; a reference to issues of intellectual property or copyrights, where relevant; the website owner’s right to suspend or cancel a member’s account; and much, much more. 

 

To learn more about this, check out our article “Creating a Terms and Conditions Policy”.

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