Then I’d want to see the car in advance too. Good luck trying to get your money back on a rejected car already paid for.MrBaozi wrote: ↑Wed Jan 12, 2022 9:47 am I have no issues paying a few days in advance. As someone else has said it's either Porsche GB or a franchise whose group is probably floated on the London stock exchange that you're giving your money to.
Ringing your bank in advance doesn't always go to plan.
Final payment for car
Macan S MY 2023
Make sure you call the dealer and confirm all the details before paying anything. NEVER pay on the basis of an email request without verifying. It might also be worth sending £1 across first and checking with the dealer it was safely received before sending the rest to the same account.
A friend of mine lost £110k when they transferred a deposit for a house to the solicitor. Turns out their email had been hacked and they lost the lot!
A friend of mine lost £110k when they transferred a deposit for a house to the solicitor. Turns out their email had been hacked and they lost the lot!
Current ride: 2015 Macan Turbo and 2004 Boxster S
If you've already paid for it, you already own it!
Macan S collected 4 Dec 2017 - Jet Black, 20" SportDesign, Agate/Pebble, 18-way, Pano roof, Bi-Xenons with PDLS, Surround View, PASM, PS+, spare wheel, towbar.
2021 Audi TT Roadster Black Edition (hers)
2011 Freelander 2 (workhorse)
2021 Audi TT Roadster Black Edition (hers)
2011 Freelander 2 (workhorse)
Ok, your OCD beats my OCDSkyway wrote: ↑Tue Jan 11, 2022 9:35 pmPersonally, even on this basis I wouldn’t do it, even if it meant inspecting one day and paying for then collecting 2 days later. Call me OCD, but I also take a paint thickness gauge ( which do work on aluminium btw ) to ensure there isn’t an area that measures bad. I once detected on a Mini that the bonnet was 4 times the paint thickness of the rest of the car only to discover it had been repaired post transit.
Current
- Guards Red 981 Cayman
GT Silver 718 Boxster 25
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- Posts: 1661
- Joined: Sat Sep 18, 2021 1:16 pm
- Location: Worcestershire
It's a lot safer today.dpg123 wrote: ↑Wed Jan 12, 2022 10:16 am Make sure you call the dealer and confirm all the details before paying anything. NEVER pay on the basis of an email request without verifying. It might also be worth sending £1 across first and checking with the dealer it was safely received before sending the rest to the same account.
A friend of mine lost £110k when they transferred a deposit for a house to the solicitor. Turns out their email had been hacked and they lost the lot!
When you add a new payee to your bank beneficiaries list they run a check on the account name. Now the likelyhood of the scammers having set up an account in a legitimate business name is very remote and would give you the right of a refund from the bank.
I locked my order last week and have received an email detailing the process for payment , registration and collection. I am happy that the sending email address is valid and that the bank details are too.
Currently
S|Leather|Air Susp|Chrono |Surround Camera|BOSE|14 way | AILPG |
http://www.porsche-code.com/PPSV6RD5
Next Project 4 March 2025
https://configurator.porsche.com/porsche-code/PR6MH479
S|Leather|Air Susp|Chrono |Surround Camera|BOSE|14 way | AILPG |
http://www.porsche-code.com/PPSV6RD5
Next Project 4 March 2025
https://configurator.porsche.com/porsche-code/PR6MH479
Yes.... a lot of you make me feel more "normal"Miopyk wrote: ↑Wed Jan 12, 2022 10:52 amOk, your OCD beats my OCDSkyway wrote: ↑Tue Jan 11, 2022 9:35 pmPersonally, even on this basis I wouldn’t do it, even if it meant inspecting one day and paying for then collecting 2 days later. Call me OCD, but I also take a paint thickness gauge ( which do work on aluminium btw ) to ensure there isn’t an area that measures bad. I once detected on a Mini that the bonnet was 4 times the paint thickness of the rest of the car only to discover it had been repaired post transit.
Bluesnose1812 wrote: ↑Wed Jan 12, 2022 12:13 pmIt's a lot safer today.dpg123 wrote: ↑Wed Jan 12, 2022 10:16 am Make sure you call the dealer and confirm all the details before paying anything. NEVER pay on the basis of an email request without verifying. It might also be worth sending £1 across first and checking with the dealer it was safely received before sending the rest to the same account.
A friend of mine lost £110k when they transferred a deposit for a house to the solicitor. Turns out their email had been hacked and they lost the lot!
When you add a new payee to your bank beneficiaries list they run a check on the account name. Now the likelyhood of the scammers having set up an account in a legitimate business name is very remote and would give you the right of a refund from the bank.
I locked my order last week and have received an email detailing the process for payment , registration and collection. I am happy that the sending email address is valid and that the bank details are too.
This happened to my Dad a few years ago - before the checks etc were widespread. It was a builder who was working on their house at the time and he was expecting an invoice. The hacker read back through their discussion to find the amount owed exactly so it didn't even look suspicious!
He had resigned the money to lost, neither the builder (who my Dad had known a long time and trusted) or my Dad believe it. The bank stonewalled them.
I suggested going through the Ombudsman, and a year later they got the money back in full - the Ombudsman ruled in my Dads favour and ordered the bank to pay him back!
Gen 3 Macan GTS: PPUAVS94
One thing I do when making large payments is to send a small amount first and ask the recipient to confirm receipt before sending the balance. I've not had any problems doing it that way, so far.Bluesnose1812 wrote: ↑Wed Jan 12, 2022 12:13 pmIt's a lot safer today.dpg123 wrote: ↑Wed Jan 12, 2022 10:16 am Make sure you call the dealer and confirm all the details before paying anything. NEVER pay on the basis of an email request without verifying. It might also be worth sending £1 across first and checking with the dealer it was safely received before sending the rest to the same account.
A friend of mine lost £110k when they transferred a deposit for a house to the solicitor. Turns out their email had been hacked and they lost the lot!
When you add a new payee to your bank beneficiaries list they run a check on the account name. Now the likelyhood of the scammers having set up an account in a legitimate business name is very remote and would give you the right of a refund from the bank.
I locked my order last week and have received an email detailing the process for payment , registration and collection. I am happy that the sending email address is valid and that the bank details are too.
Current
- Guards Red 981 Cayman
GT Silver 718 Boxster 25
Skyway wrote: ↑Wed Jan 12, 2022 9:51 amThen I’d want to see the car in advance too. Good luck trying to get your money back on a rejected car already paid for.MrBaozi wrote: ↑Wed Jan 12, 2022 9:47 am I have no issues paying a few days in advance. As someone else has said it's either Porsche GB or a franchise whose group is probably floated on the London stock exchange that you're giving your money to.
Ringing your bank in advance doesn't always go to plan.
Anyone would think you're dealing with Terry Tibbs, not Porsche!
Gen 3 Macan GTS: PPUAVS94
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