Well...yet another sad Golf 1.4TSI 118 story on blown engines. VW must be getting sick of this (assuming it's listening) but I think the company, and its Australian service agents, deserve all the bad press they get. So...
My partner bought this car in September 2011 from Duttons in South Australia. 2 years and 28,000 km later the engine started to rough idle and...you guessed it...there proved to be compression failure in cylinder 1 as the piston had cracked. This was under warranty, and the engine was completely replaced but only after VW tried on the following: (i) Put in a reconditioned engine instead - strenuously rejected, and finally accepted by VW. (ii) Repair the broken engine - also strenuously rejected, and finally accepted by VW. (iii) Put in a brand new engine but only with a 2 year warranty instead of a 3 year - we finally buckled on the warranty period.
I bet you can guess what happened next! Just over 22,000 km later, and just a week outside the 2 year warranty period, the same problem happened, this time in a different cylinder. At about the same time, the two front shock absorbers needed to be replaced - and this car doesn't even have a driveway bump to go over. This is where the bun fight really started, both with VW and Duttons...
VW was basically intractable: Certainly no new car. Certainly no new engine. Out of the 'goodness of its heart' - since the car was a week out of their shortened warranty - it would only agree to a repaired engine but again not with a 3 year warranty, only with a 2 year warranty. Duttons was largely obstructive, and often rude. Duttons seemed intent on defending itself and VW rather than the customer. I'm not sure why it took this line since ultimately they can charge any repairs or replacements straight back to VW.
All this took about 6 weeks of to-ing and fro-ing. There were some positives: VW continued to pay for a hire car, though with great reluctance. A couple of the supervisors in the Duttons workshop were kind and provided useful information that the sales manager could not, or refused to, provide - not that this info did our case any good. The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission listened politely - but were basically useless. They pretty much admitted that the car companies were too powerful for them - and certainly any individual - and a company will just stonewall you unless you are prepared to go to court. Aussie Golf owners who have rung the ACCC have probably had the same experience.
So, the washup: A new car that by 50,000 km needed two front shocks (~$1000 in cost), a replacement engine, and then a repaired engine. It's really not good enough, and given that the second engine went down at the time VW was outed for the diesel engine emissions scandal, it just makes a nonsense of how trustworthy this company is - basically, it can't be trusted.
There were a couple of stings in the tail:
(i) The sales manager finally came out and said that the original engine should not have been changed for an entirely new engine. Why? Because the new engine that was used had exactly the same faulty components as the original. So it was bound to fail, wasn't it? And it did. Why they didn't use a new engine with the upgraded parts is beyond me - the problem was well known to VW by then (2013). I'm not sure where this lies on the scale of dumbness, but it has to be right down there. (The second engine, which was repaired rather than replaced, was repaired with upgraded parts.)
(ii) The second engine had exactly the same engine number as the first engine. Apparently, the engines are imported with no serial number so Duttons/VW stamped on the same number as the original. This is illegal under Australian law - for obvious reasons since it contributes to the illegal trade in car parts. The sales manager seemed completely blank to the implications of this - he insisted that a new engine had been put in and that is certainly what Duttons had charged back to VW. But was a new engine put in? Or did they simply repair the original engine (badly) and put that back in? Who knows?...What I do know is that we spent hours trying to establish the legalities of the situation with the South Australian vehicle registration department - yet more time spent in an ongoing fiasco. And, where is that 'other' engine? Who has it now? It's all very murky.
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