Arh! Learn something new every day!
Owners manual !? Only real men skip the manual !
I wasn't going to throw that into the mix, I have small kids so that one is no longer an option....I get buffeting once in a blue moon, I saw it more with our Hollandia roof which was a lot bigger.
Arh! Learn something new every day!
Owners manual !? Only real men skip the manual !
Joy Toy: 2010 Skoda vRS - Metalic Black - Liftback - TSI - 6sp Manual - Leather - Sunroof - Fiscon Plus
I suppose you dont eat Quiche either.
Personally i never read the destructions on most things - especially self assembly stuff and that is why i always end up taking twice as long to complete the job.
The reason why i had read the Owners Manual so much was due to the waiting before i got my hands on the vehicle. It was my only link to the vehicle i was getting.
MY11 Octavia RS; 2.0 TSI DSG; Liftback; Sprint Yellow; Sat Nav (standard Fit now); Front Parking Sensors; Supreme Onyx Leather; Bluetooth and Alarm.
Ordered - 8th Jun 2010; Built - 31st Aug 2010
Delivered 12/11/10 - 12.30.
I actually found that about 1 year later, I always having the sunroof tilt. thanks for sharing about droping 60 mm rear window to stop buffeting, will try it tomorrow,
In what seems another lifetime I owned a BMW E30 325is. The sunroof functions were the same as the current VAG roofs. The only differences were that it was a metal panel, not glass, and there was a 40 or so mm tinted plastic flap across the front of the opening that automatically popped up once the roof was opened more than about 1/3 of the way. These flaps was common on many older style sunroofs, many of which had much bigger openings than today's sunroofs.
The flap was there to create a low pressure area behind it, making the air presure inside the car higher than the air going over the roof opening (think leading and trailing edges of an aircraft wing). Result - no annoying air buffetting, whether on Autobahns, on Europes 130kph motorways, or driving the kids to school. There must be a reason that engineers have phased the flaps out, but aside from cost (which companies generally aren't shy about passing them on to consumers) I can't figure out why modern cars now have air buffetting, and their 30 year old predecessors didn't, and all for the sake of a cheap piece of plastic and a couple of spring loaded hinges.
Rosie, those hinged flaps are still there, I've had them on an aftermarket Hollandia which was huge compared to the VAG one, and the VAG ones have them with ridges in them. The buffeting usually only happens at one speed, I've found in all cases its around 30-40km/hr. You really have to be sitting at that speed consistently...and it would only be once in a few months I do that. There is also the comfort setting where it doesn't open all the way, that is the setting where no buffeting should happen at all. With it open fully you get the slight affect at a certain speed, but not anywhere else so I leave it right open.
I've found the VAG one barely noticable, my Hollandia being a lot larger had a more obvious/painful effect.
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