Steering & Suspension Defects Under the New Hampshire Lemon Law
Steering and suspension failures under New Hampshire's lemon law — death wobble, EPS faults, and salt-corroded components — under the 3-attempt / 30-business-day presumption.
Steering and suspension defects qualify under the New Hampshire Lemon Law when they substantially impair use, market value, or safety. New Hampshire reaches them under the standard 3-attempt / 30-business-day presumption — there is no one-attempt safety shortcut.
Common qualifying defects
- Steering failure — loss of steering control.
- Electric power steering (EPS) failures — loss of assist, wandering, warning lights.
- “Death wobble” — violent steering oscillation in solid-front-axle trucks.
- Steering-rack failures — leaks, play, noise.
- Suspension component failures — struts, control arms, ball joints.
- Salt-corroded steering/suspension components — accelerated by New Hampshire winters.
New Hampshire factors
- Heavy road salt accelerates corrosion of steering and suspension components — joints, links, fasteners degrade faster.
- Frost heaves and rough rural roads stress suspension.
- Rural and White Mountains distances run up the out-of-service count when parts are on order.
A serious steering failure and safety
A defect causing loss of steering control clearly impairs safety — making the substantial-impairment element straightforward and supporting a CPA theory. The presumption math (3 attempts / 30 days) is the same regardless. Flag the seriousness on every repair order.
Proving the case
- Repair orders for the recurring steering/suspension symptom across same-dealer visits.
- Video of wandering, death-wobble, or assist-loss events.
- TSBs for the platform — supports CPA damages.
Bottom line
Steering and suspension defects qualify under New Hampshire’s 3-attempt / 30-business-day presumption — and a steering-safety failure strengthens the case and a CPA claim. Road salt is a distinctive corrosion driver. Document the seriousness and recurrence. Get a free case review.
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Read →Think you've got a lemon?
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