Fisherman
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Roger, might have something for you. We run three Citroen Relays at work. Our oldest 2015 Relay has recently developed the same symptoms as you appear to have. Basically, in our case, the ignition switch has just become worn. When you twist the key to ignition, the engine starts but then the key does not quite rotate back to where it ought to rest and the wipers do not work. It took a short while to work out that you just have to click the key back a tiny turn yourself and all works as it ought to. I am busy and this is an easy fix once you get the hang of it but in our case I will look to replace the ignition switch as a next step. Hope that helps a little, good luck. PS I feel your pain with garages. We have been running commercial vehicles for 38 years now and have likely used as many mechanics! Bloody minefield. If you find a good one, hang one to them. Don't let it get you down, pay up, move on and learn from it, is my advice. Sometimes legal action is necessary in life but in my experience is that it is a long, drawn out affair that is rather expensive and can be stressful if you are that way inclined.
If items are installed they then become second hand and distributors don't accept them back there will be marks on items from washers etcSurely the garage can send it all back anyway, maybe a restocking charge but I'd be having a word with them.
The 'part swapping ' approach to diagnosis has always been a problem in many fields. My dad was a TV and radio engineer when they first became household items and had the knowledge to diagnose faults and repair or replace accordingly. There would also be many so called "engineers' who didn't have a clue about electronics who carried around a suitcase full of various TV valves and would simply swap the valves in the defective TV one by one in the hope of fixing the issue , if not they'd make a call out charge and say the TV couldn't be fixed. A crafty practice and arguably dishonest. They were referred to as 'Valve Jockeys ' . Some things never change eh.Seems nonsensical to me, just fit the wrong parts with no come back for the customer, around here if a garage orders parts and they are not the problem they go back and get restocked with a handling charge and resold as shop soiled.
It is actually quite easy to take the garage to the Small Claims Court - but it probably wouldn't come to that anyway. I have done it on a couple of occasions, and won both times. You can be certain that you will win, what they have done is utter incompetence, it isn't 'well they did their best and it might have worked'. They did nothing to prove the part they changed was faulty before changing it. You can compare it to a builder who builds a wall which falls down the day after they have been paid.I'm sure you're right that it's a faulty ignition switch ( see my reply to gasgas's post). I am going to try to get the £981 back from my credit card issuer under section 75 of the CCA 1974 but if that fails I'll probably take your advice and put it down to experience rather than take the Garage to the Court.
I guess it depends on how the judge rules and what he thinks is fair and reasonable. If the garage/judge insisted on having the parts back it wouldn't bother me, just let them swap the original unit back in, job done.If the parts remain with the vehicle can they demand them back? or only refund the cost of labour? as Roger has the benefit of the new parts regardless that they were not faulty in the first place.