This came up in another forum on the topic of the TS and scoop/ snowblower/ JB jr, and some confusion around the reason Husqvarna refused to honor my warranty, I thought I would share my response, including this forum, in case it can help someone that is here too.
"FLHusqGT didn't get warranty coverage Because he was using a non approved aftermarket Piece of equipment. Had he bent the frame using the OEM front scoop Husqvarna would Have Probably cover the frame damage under warranty"
I want to clear this up if I can, I just don't want this to possibly add to the confusion that was created by Husqvarna, sincerely, The reason why my warranty was denied had nothing to do with the implement (Husqvarna dosen't make implements, they are mostly produced by Argi Fab in our category), to be clear. If it was denied do to the implement then it would have been a clear and direct violation of the "Magnuson-Moss Warranty—Federal Trade Commission Improvement Act", 15 USC 2301, and my State's much tougher laws (FL, and rule of thumb is, you can always ad to but not take away from) on Implied Warranty, on Implied Warranty of Fitness. That would have opened the door to a class action suit easy, and they are much slicker than making that kind of mistake.
OPEI sets the standards for Garden Tractor as this,
"Garden Tractors are designed to supply sufficient power for home lawn, garden
and yard attachments: moldboard plows, tillers, cultivators, snow throwers,
sweepers, leaf mulchers, etc. Fifty percent of garden tractors are used for areas
larger than two acres."
OPEI was quoted in an article in 1979 as saying this,
"Outdoor Power Equipment Institute
(which is responsible for sorting out the various categories of lawn and garden machinery), a garden
tractor is properly defined as a "self-propelled riding vehicle — designed for general purpose lawn
and garden work — which must have all attachments removable . . . and be capable of pulling a
plow."
Hasn't changed much, plus there is an SIC/NIACS number for the specific class, not to mention the EU and AUS have specific specs too for the purpose of regulating EP, safety, and tariffs.
I've been continuously digging for the truth and after providing proof to Husqvarna that they lied to me, they are not interested in talking anymore. When this comes up I have to keep offering to have an open, transparent, honest, public conversation about this with a Husqvarna Rep that has actual verifiable authority within the company to make warranty decisions, and a rep from any other company that Husqvarna uses as a reason in their denial, to step forward and talk with me, and to the forum, the public witnesses. I have had this out there since approx SEP, and all I hear from them is silence. I sincerely hope that Husqvarna takes me up on this.
On the snowblower, most stories I have received are specific to the snowblower and snow-blade use, buckling the frame in the identical spot, this is why the Chassis Reinforcement Plate was added on the TS (while dropping the GT label to further potentially separate themselves from an implied warranty of fitness?). I have yet to see a snowblower of the use that is common to garden tractors for this type of machine, that has been attached without having to remove the chassis reinforcement plate for use.
Consider this;
Dealer to customer;
"Our new TS can handle garden tractor attachments like the snowblower in this brochure with Husqvarna's name on it. This powerful machine offers a "robust" steel chassis and a ground engaging transaxle to handle some of your toughest jobs. We are so confident in our all new significantly redesigned TS series that you get a 3 year warranty, excluding of course the motor, transaxle, and normal wearable parts, plus a 5 year chassis warranty against failures of material and workmanship, to give you the confidence in ownership that all Husqvarna owners have!
1) If the TS came with the chassis reinforcement plates then this equipment was made apart of the "normal use" of this machine under the abuse/misuse clause of your warranty, meaning if the snowblower has support brackets that will require the owner to remove the chassis reinforcement plates to install, no matter whose brand is on it, you have just abused and or misused your machine under the specific clause of Husqvarna's warranty.
When the frame buckles, and it will in the very place the chassis reinforcement plates cover, then you find that Husqvarna will not honor the warranty. If you get it fixed it's only because the Dealer had enough ethics to just take care of his customer on his own dime or a very cooperative deal was struck between the Dealer and supplier.
Can anyone else identify the other problems (other than it's cheesy, I know, but a relevant example) as referring to the FTC Magnuson-Moss Act and your warranty? This is what Husqvarna uses to induce a customer into the sale/ or parts of.
The frame that came with the TS (GT, and the very exact frame my GT has) is the same gauge steel (weighs just 26lbs) as their cheapest grass cutter and is not a common GT frame, but more common among grass cutters. It is not capable of GT work as verified by the professional services of a mechanical engineer I hired that has been in this business personally for 40+ years with a long established company specializing in agricultural fabrication near Orlando.
Its because of all this understandable confusion I decided to learn all I could and help those like me in anyway I can, to warn potential future customers, and either help Husqvarna to reign in their deceptive warranty and marketing practices, or to be as much of a thorn in their side as I can, for as long as I can, for the hope that they get honest, and stop abusing their customers. I am very impassioned by this now, and I really do wish the best for those that have bought the TS/GT.
I have included the 42" Husqvarna front scoop owners manual, check out the support brackets, and look at the support brackets on the JB jr, also note where those brackets go on the frame. They are the same in function and dimension not quality, (JB jr is much better) snowblower, and plow have the same type of support bracket as the pictured Husqvarna 42"/36" scoop.
Very Respectfully,