have 7 speed dsg owners considered getting transmission coolers ?
i know when i put my fmic on my other car, i had to get one, otherwise there was a high chance of overheating
I would say it all depends on how long you plan on keeping your car for. If you are going to keep you car until the end of the warranty period and then sell it, I don't think it really matters which 'box you choose because VW will fix any problems if your DSG is defective. If you know that you will keep your car well after the warranty period ends then I would certainly stick to the manual because it is much less likely to fail outside the warranty period (where any repairs will be of your cost).
Alex Aescht
MY13 Dark Silver VW up! 5-door 55MPI manual — Comfort Style Pack, Comfort Drive Pack, Maps + More, Panoramic Sunroof
MY11 Pepper Grey VW Polo Comfortline 66TDI manual ― Comfort Pack, Audio Pack.
have 7 speed dsg owners considered getting transmission coolers ?
i know when i put my fmic on my other car, i had to get one, otherwise there was a high chance of overheating
Alex Aescht
MY13 Dark Silver VW up! 5-door 55MPI manual — Comfort Style Pack, Comfort Drive Pack, Maps + More, Panoramic Sunroof
MY11 Pepper Grey VW Polo Comfortline 66TDI manual ― Comfort Pack, Audio Pack.
Plenty of Polos in each tsi/tdi/gti version in Wollongong. 4 or 5 in my work carpark alone. Maybe demographics say we cant afford as many golfs.
You should avoid the diesel if you arent doing longer trips or freeway drives to keep the particulate filter clean. Its worse if you are a lead foot city driver. There is nothing at all wrong with the tdi if driven within its parameters. Dealers dont seem to be passing that crucial bit of info on. Perhaps they dont know? Hard to believe.
I personally dont like the dsg. I drove golf and polo tsi with dsg and they both had the issues that I found annoying. When you are at the traffic lights in a conventional auto and the light changes green, you put your foot down and the car moves. Sure, it moves off a little sluggishly as the torque converter takes the strain but it moves. The dsg just sits there for a moment while it puts its pants on. Once moving and accelerating it is silky smooth and all is good. But then when you slow down to an intersection and turn, the gearbox is always in 3rd gear and it takes that little hesitation to get into 2nd and pull away. 2 dealers told me to drive it like a manual. If I am going to do that, why not just save my money and get a clutch pedal. I think there has been a software upgrade recently that may have fixed it, but the damage in my psychology is already done. And should I be unlucky enough to have one of the too common issues my car will be on the hoist for a few days. Regardless of whether it is covered by warranty that is going to piss me off. Unless I get a scirocco loan car.
No the way it is designed makes it impossible to put aftermarket cooling in. I have to say the Volkswagen automotive group made a technological marvel with the 7 speed gearbox, been the first gearbox in the world with 7 forward gears, in a dual clutch config (which is a marvel in itself) which is designed to be 100% maintenance free (via internal cooling systems for the gearbox and mechatronics unit, lifetime filters and heat dispassion through design) and weighs next to nothing so it can be put in transverse mounted cars.
I think they got into trouble when they decided to put it in worldwide cars because of the way it is designed, it is for European climates and in so has very few problems over there and is very successful over the manual transmission which Europeans have hated to move on from because of its usefulness in the snow. All the problems around the DSG I would say are linked to hot climates, Purely just my opinion but having DSG problems in South Africa, China, Malaysia, India, Singapore and Australia would lead me to believe that heat is an issue.
I would say the issue more specifically is that there is NO cooling for the clutches what so ever as they are dry to reduce weight. The clutches start burning up and the heat that comes of the clutches are heating everything else in the gearbox up to the point were basic air cooling can't cool it, especially in start stop traffic for hours in the city. I think it is this reason why the DSGs are failing especially in comparison to the 6 speed DSG which is pretty much proven over here.
You are totally right. The diesel Polo is a truly great car, but only if you do lots of freeway driving and/or you drive it sans lead foot. My family's driving habits do not really help the DPF that much – Dad changes up too early, Mum is a lead foot, my sister doesn't change up at all (well that's what it feels/sounds like anyway ) and I only use the car to feed the horse/take the rubbish bins out.
The DPF is one reason why we stayed away from the Renault Megane dCi and opted for the petrol, although that probably wasn't the main reason (I swear the megane diesel is louder than a 3 cylinder tractor).
Alex Aescht
MY13 Dark Silver VW up! 5-door 55MPI manual — Comfort Style Pack, Comfort Drive Pack, Maps + More, Panoramic Sunroof
MY11 Pepper Grey VW Polo Comfortline 66TDI manual ― Comfort Pack, Audio Pack.
On a 30 minute drive, I would probably see about 3 of them on the road, which is why I don't bother posting them on the Polo Spotted thread anymore. You are right about the amount of Golfs though...we once played 'spot the Golf' and we spotted 54 of them on a drive from Camberwell to North Melbourne
Americans don't like small cars and/or small engines, lol.
Since petrol costs about USD 3.30 per gallon over there (AUD 0.85 per litre!), what's the point?
For instance, the smallest engine in the Audi A3 is the 2.0 TFSI, the smallest BMW 1 and 3-series variants are the 128i/328i, the smallest Mercedes C-class variant is the C250, and the A-class and B-class aren't even available.
Bookmarks