so u going to reveal to us wat the floor dropping price was?
will give us an idea (when its our turn) of how much to laugh.....or swear!
Needed a new battery for the S3 which is the same as the one in my vRS (looks like it's a very common VW group battery) so I rang the Skoda/Audi dealer to cross check the price. After I had picked myself up off the floor I asked (jokingly) if a Skoda battery was any cheaper only to be informed that it was the same part number and price.
At least when I recycle what must be 17kg of gold plate that is in the old battery I may come out with a reasonable changeover price.
Having said all of that it actually doesn't worry me because as I sell batteries for a living (not car ones) I got a replacement for less than 1/3 what the Audi dealer wanted but this is just a warning to people if your battery goes be prepared for a shock. Our Audi is coming up for it's fourth birthday btw and most of the driving it does is trips over an hour long so usage style has not killed the battery.
so u going to reveal to us wat the floor dropping price was?
will give us an idea (when its our turn) of how much to laugh.....or swear!
MY17 Superb 162TSI, Business Grey, Tech+Comfort Pack, APR ECU+TCU Stg 1, SLA, Rieger Splitter + Side Skirts, Eibach Pro-Kit Springs, Hardrace Swaybar, TPMS
I got a new one last year for $140 after the original failed after ~5 years.
That didnt make me fall over.
I would say the best place to buy a replacement battery is a reputable auto electrician.
'07 Touareg V6 TDI with air suspension
'98 Mk3 Cabriolet 2.0 8V
'99 A4 Quattro 1.8T
Our RS battery failed on the weekend for the first time in 5 years; a replacement from a rural dealer (we were in Coffs Harbour) was $160.
Mine: Silver 2006 Volkswagen Golf Sportline 2.0FSI 6M (with a sunroof)
Parents': Candy White 2008 Skoda Octavia RS 2.0TFSI 6M Liftback
my previous Tiguan (same motor and battery as the RS) battery died THREE days before the three year warranty expired...(even though I was over the KMS, but they didnt ask about that...)
Was just replaced by the roadside service guy (NRMA) sent out by VW 'roadside assist'.
No charge to me as it was within the three year period...
If I had to pay for it, he said it would have been $190 installed, including erasing error codes etc from the dash.....
That is not too bad a price I reckon.
2018 Ralyee Green RS wagon. Fully optioned.
Previous vehicles:2015 Volvo V60 Polestar (my one detour from VW/Skoda!)
2013 Platin grey RS wagon / 2012 White Polo GTI / 2009 Black 125 Tiguan
My memory with batteries was that they come under a separate warranty that isn't necessarily the same length. I recall when Ford in the early 90s had just a 1 yr warranty and no battery warranty at all. Our brand new EB Falcon cooked a battery at the 6 mth mark due to a design flaw Ford made and we had to cough up for a few more during it's life.
I don't know whether it makes any difference to battery life, but I once had a 12yr old battery in my first car when I started doing this. I always turn the key and wait until all checks etc are done before cranking the engine. I suspect the Skoda defies this a bit though as the headlights come in stealing amps in a darkened garage and my Santa Fe does whatever it likes due to having a start button. But it seems I tend to get longer than usual battery life. When the battery went in our Mazda 6, the guy who replaced it saw surprised about the MY as most of them had gone years before.
Here's a quote I was emailed a few months ago:
Haven't replied yet
None of what you do above will have any affect on the life of the battery.
Things that will affect the life are the ambient temperature, lead acid batteries deteriorate very, very quickly over 25C so Melbourne will be better for battery life than say Darwin and having a vehicle in shade during the day will be better than one in the sun (a light coloured vehicle will also be better than a dark one) and usage. If the battery is not kept charged for whatever reason it will quickly fail. SLA batteries do not recover well from "going flat".
Battery life span is somewhat variable. The battles fitted to a car have a 5 year design life so generally you would expect to have to change them after the cars fourth birthday and before its fifth but some people may only get 3 years and others 8. There is no real way of judging how long a battery will last.
As far as warranties are concerned I do not believe that batteries are covered I think they are listed as consumables like tyres and brake pads. Obviously if a battery fails in 2 weeks that's one thing but I suspect that after 2 1/2 years you may have some problems getting a replacement.
I was quoted $311 without installation by the Audi/Skoda dealer, I paid under $100 and even though I had never looked at installing a battery into a VW product before I had the job done in about 20 minutes so the 15 minutes labour quoted above is reasonable IMO. The last time I paid $300 for a battery they were special 270aH units that weighed 70 kg each and I needed 60 of them.
Last edited by K1W1; 18-01-2013 at 04:21 PM.
Warranty:
I just read the Skoda Australia warranty on line and it has this clause:
Obviously batteries are a wear item in the same way that many of the items listed are but for some reason they are not specifically excluded. I reckon that could lead to some interesting discussions if one did fail towards the end of the standard 3 year warranty period.What is not covered by Warranty
Repairs that do not fall under the term “defects from manufacture” such as:
Wear and tear. Any parts that wear out as part of their normal operation (e.g. clutch linings, brake discs and
pads, brake linings, wiper blades, globes of all types (including Bi-Xenon and LED), fuses, trims brakes, diesel
particulate filters, catalytic converters, all belts, tyres, wiper blades, spark plugs, filters, Satellite Navigation
update disks and all other parts of your vehicle that have been subject to normal wear and tear).
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