Bignate603
Lifer
- Sep 5, 2000
- 13,897
- 1
- 0
Honestly, if it were me I probably wouldn't go and get another VW. A big selling point of those cars was the advanced transmission. At this point I wouldn't touch a car with that transmission.
Originally posted by: JulesMaximus
Originally posted by: Excelsior
Yeah, because Nissan never issues recalls and their cars are the paragon of reliability.
Oh, and do you know of any 370Z's that have required a new transmission at 11k miles...or taken 4-5 weeks to swap? Yeah...I thought not.
Does the 370Z have a dual clutch gearbox? Thats right, it doesn't. The GT-R does though, and when it fails after a few launches Nissan tells you to suck it up and give them $20K for a new transmission. Brilliant.
Again, why would anyone compare the GTI to a limited production supercar...because it has a DSG transmission? I remainby the logic in this thread.
Originally posted by: PhoKingGuy
Its not a VW problem, its Borg-Warners fault, the part goes to Germany for their engineers to analyze, not VWs. Hence why im ok with it![]()
BTW, about your 350Z transmission Edmunds Inside Line long term test 370Z
Originally posted by: Excelsior
Originally posted by: JulesMaximus
Originally posted by: Excelsior
Yeah, because Nissan never issues recalls and their cars are the paragon of reliability.
Oh, and do you know of any 370Z's that have required a new transmission at 11k miles...or taken 4-5 weeks to swap? Yeah...I thought not.
Does the 370Z have a dual clutch gearbox? Thats right, it doesn't. The GT-R does though, and when it fails after a few launches Nissan tells you to suck it up and give them $20K for a new transmission. Brilliant.
Again, why would anyone compare the GTI to a limited production supercar...because it has a DSG transmission? I remainby the logic in this thread.
It is you who is lacking the logic. You were comparing a standard auto to a dual clutch transmission. The only production car Nissan currently has with such a transmission is the GT-R and they certainly don't have a superior one to VW's. Both have issues. DSG hasn't been in production cars of significant volume for that long, and by far the most DCT's have been sold by VW. There will be some growing pains with them.
Your bias against VW/Audi and in favor of Nissan is clear here. VW is covering it under warranty and issued a proper recall. At least they're handling it right. As for myself, I'd rather have a standard manual gearbox anyhow. I'll wait till issues with DCT's are ironed out.
Originally posted by: NaOH
Originally posted by: JulesMaximus
Originally posted by: Excelsior
Yeah, because Nissan never issues recalls and their cars are the paragon of reliability.
Oh, and do you know of any 370Z's that have required a new transmission at 11k miles...or taken 4-5 weeks to swap? Yeah...I thought not.
Does the 370Z have a dual clutch gearbox? Thats right, it doesn't. The GT-R does though, and when it fails after a few launches Nissan tells you to suck it up and give them $20K for a new transmission. Brilliant.
Again, why would anyone compare the GTI to a limited production supercar...because it has a DSG transmission? I remainby the logic in this thread.
Because you were comparing STANDARD transmission to a more complex one that probably fewer mechanics have had exposure too :/
Originally posted by: JulesMaximus
Originally posted by: Excelsior
Originally posted by: JulesMaximus
Originally posted by: Excelsior
Yeah, because Nissan never issues recalls and their cars are the paragon of reliability.
Oh, and do you know of any 370Z's that have required a new transmission at 11k miles...or taken 4-5 weeks to swap? Yeah...I thought not.
Does the 370Z have a dual clutch gearbox? Thats right, it doesn't. The GT-R does though, and when it fails after a few launches Nissan tells you to suck it up and give them $20K for a new transmission. Brilliant.
Again, why would anyone compare the GTI to a limited production supercar...because it has a DSG transmission? I remainby the logic in this thread.
It is you who is lacking the logic. You were comparing a standard auto to a dual clutch transmission. The only production car Nissan currently has with such a transmission is the GT-R and they certainly don't have a superior one to VW's. Both have issues. DSG hasn't been in production cars of significant volume for that long, and by far the most DCT's have been sold by VW. There will be some growing pains with them.
Your bias against VW/Audi and in favor of Nissan is clear here. VW is covering it under warranty and issued a proper recall. At least they're handling it right. As for myself, I'd rather have a standard manual gearbox anyhow. I'll wait till issues with DCT's are ironed out.
Which is why I'd never buy a vehicle with a DSG. I'm not sure why the average joe is so hot on them in the first place...probably just too fucking lazy to learn to drive a car with a proper gearbox. I hate flappy paddle gearboxes.
As for the comparison, I think it's kind of pointless to say, "Oh, the GT-R has a flappy paddle gearbox and they have problems too!" As if that somehow makes it okay for VW to have major major issues with theirs.
I'm still wondering why VW is replacing the entire car for the OP. That just sends up huge red flags about this vehicle IMO.
I do feel bad that the OP has to go through all this with a brand new car. I'd be freaking pissed. I wonder what VW is going to replace his car with. Similar doesn't sound all that great to me and with their track record with this car I'd be rather worried.
BTW-I wouldn't buy a GT-R either.![]()
Originally posted by: PhoKingGuy
Originally posted by: JulesMaximus
Originally posted by: Excelsior
Originally posted by: JulesMaximus
Originally posted by: Excelsior
Yeah, because Nissan never issues recalls and their cars are the paragon of reliability.
Oh, and do you know of any 370Z's that have required a new transmission at 11k miles...or taken 4-5 weeks to swap? Yeah...I thought not.
Does the 370Z have a dual clutch gearbox? Thats right, it doesn't. The GT-R does though, and when it fails after a few launches Nissan tells you to suck it up and give them $20K for a new transmission. Brilliant.
Again, why would anyone compare the GTI to a limited production supercar...because it has a DSG transmission? I remainby the logic in this thread.
It is you who is lacking the logic. You were comparing a standard auto to a dual clutch transmission. The only production car Nissan currently has with such a transmission is the GT-R and they certainly don't have a superior one to VW's. Both have issues. DSG hasn't been in production cars of significant volume for that long, and by far the most DCT's have been sold by VW. There will be some growing pains with them.
Your bias against VW/Audi and in favor of Nissan is clear here. VW is covering it under warranty and issued a proper recall. At least they're handling it right. As for myself, I'd rather have a standard manual gearbox anyhow. I'll wait till issues with DCT's are ironed out.
Which is why I'd never buy a vehicle with a DSG. I'm not sure why the average joe is so hot on them in the first place...probably just too fucking lazy to learn to drive a car with a proper gearbox. I hate flappy paddle gearboxes.
As for the comparison, I think it's kind of pointless to say, "Oh, the GT-R has a flappy paddle gearbox and they have problems too!" As if that somehow makes it okay for VW to have major major issues with theirs.
I'm still wondering why VW is replacing the entire car for the OP. That just sends up huge red flags about this vehicle IMO.
I do feel bad that the OP has to go through all this with a brand new car. I'd be freaking pissed. I wonder what VW is going to replace his car with. Similar doesn't sound all that great to me and with their track record with this car I'd be rather worried.
BTW-I wouldn't buy a GT-R either.![]()
The main reason for replacement is that itll be about 6-7 weeks because of a backlog. Since I complained to VWoA about it in the first place they decided rather than make me wait that long they're just going to buy it back and go from there. I honestly loved the car and its an isolated problem so I see no reason not to go back to VW, their customer service in this regard is amazing.
Originally posted by: JulesMaximus
Originally posted by: PhoKingGuy
The main reason for replacement is that itll be about 6-7 weeks because of a backlog. Since I complained to VWoA about it in the first place they decided rather than make me wait that long they're just going to buy it back and go from there. I honestly loved the car and its an isolated problem so I see no reason not to go back to VW, their customer service in this regard is amazing.
If it's an isolated incident then why is there a 6-7 week backlog?
Originally posted by: Bignate603
Originally posted by: JulesMaximus
Originally posted by: PhoKingGuy
The main reason for replacement is that itll be about 6-7 weeks because of a backlog. Since I complained to VWoA about it in the first place they decided rather than make me wait that long they're just going to buy it back and go from there. I honestly loved the car and its an isolated problem so I see no reason not to go back to VW, their customer service in this regard is amazing.
If it's an isolated incident then why is there a 6-7 week backlog?
Google on DSG and 'flash of death'
Problems with the DSG transmission are anything but isolated.
Originally posted by: Excelsior
In that case, I call BS on that as well, unless he means simply hitting 45mph for bursts on the highway, more averaging just 45 on the highway stretches and not taking into account actually getting to and from the highway. For instance, I can average almost 33mpg from door to door with mostly highway miles to work while going an average of 70-75mph. That is including neighborhood, down the road to the on ramp, going on the ramp, and the same getting off. If I subtracted that from the average I could get maybe 35. This is with the 1.8T in my Passat. I don't see how someone could get another 10mph unless they're driving 60mph and doing absolutely crazy hypermile stuff. Even then....
Originally posted by: jhu
Before it was called "hypermiling" we used to call it "driving at the posted speed limit,"
Originally posted by: jhu
Originally posted by: Excelsior
In that case, I call BS on that as well, unless he means simply hitting 45mph for bursts on the highway, more averaging just 45 on the highway stretches and not taking into account actually getting to and from the highway. For instance, I can average almost 33mpg from door to door with mostly highway miles to work while going an average of 70-75mph. That is including neighborhood, down the road to the on ramp, going on the ramp, and the same getting off. If I subtracted that from the average I could get maybe 35. This is with the 1.8T in my Passat. I don't see how someone could get another 10mph unless they're driving 60mph and doing absolutely crazy hypermile stuff. Even then....
He's referring to me BTW. Before it was called "hypermiling" we used to call it "driving at the posted speed limit," and that was back when we had the 55 mph national speed limit.
I did two trips from Sacramento to San Diego this year and it was ~45 mpg for both trips at an average speed of about 60 mph.
Originally posted by: brblx
or that.
i can't believe they ship the part to germany to be tested, and then ship it back, all while the car's in the shop. i've never experienced that at a dealer, all we ever sent back was bad parts after the car was gone.
Its not VWs fault nor engineering that caused the part to fail, its a bad batch of control sensors made by Borg-Warner.
Originally posted by: PhoKingGuy
You did 60 on highway 5 and didn't get run off the road? Hell the semis are moving faster than that. I'm getting about 28mpg in my rental and i'm babying it pretty well. I dont see how you can get 45mpgs without doing anything retardedly stupid.
Originally posted by: Bignate603
Originally posted by: brblx
or that.
i can't believe they ship the part to germany to be tested, and then ship it back, all while the car's in the shop. i've never experienced that at a dealer, all we ever sent back was bad parts after the car was gone.
It sounds like they never expected to have any issues with that component, or that the problems would be so rare they could deal with it quickly.
Originally posted by: PhoKingGuy
The part in question is a 4k computer/electromechanical hybrid board. Its not exactly the easiest thing to mass produce I think.
For reference: http://www.my-gti.com/832/volk...chatronic-control-unit
