Mine: Silver 2006 Volkswagen Golf Sportline 2.0FSI 6M (with a sunroof)
Parents': Candy White 2008 Skoda Octavia RS 2.0TFSI 6M Liftback
i've convinced a few mates to look at Skoda & 2 have bought after test driving. They are "car people" though. None of the "normal" punters will even seek out a dealership.
My Sister just bought an EOS after having 2x Accords, a tarago, a commodore & 2x Mazdas. She wouldn't even look inside my Skoda when it was parked in the driveway & has been shocked that the interiors are very similar....... (She also didn't know the EOS was a cabrio until the salesman showed her).
Acceptance of the FWD Yeti will be interesting. Might do OK if it's reasonably grunty off the lights & fuel efficient in stop/start traffic. Insurance will be an issue because it's turbo. Also, people will think a 1.2 can't cut it simply because it's a 1.2 - neither my Dad or my FIL will buy anything less than a 2.5L because "they carry passengers" - never mind that the throttle never gets beyond 30% and the old duffers only drive 8,000km a year. People constantly comment to me "Gee your Skoda goes well for a 2 litre." Which is when I remind them it's a 1.8 - people are too set in their ways & expectations.
I hope the Yeti does well but so far, the buying public keep dissapointing me.
carandimage The place where Off-Topic is On-Topic
I used to think I was anal-retentive until I started getting involved in car forums
Pearls before swine. As long as the black paint highlights whatever she has chosen to wear that day, she's happy. It will be one of those chronic oil burners because she never exceeds half throttle & didn't believe me when I told her to "drive with a bit of vigor" for the first 1000km.
We had a wedding last month. Was a cheapo job so we used the family cars. Father & Bride had the EOS. They had the top down to drive out of the street while the neighbours watched; drove out of sight and put it back up for the 5km drive to the ceremony; then stopped 500m from the ceremony and dropped the roof again so everyone could see them arrive in a Cabrio.
I really miss my old Mk3.5 cabrio but it wasn't about the pose, more the wind in the hair & the noise of the engine.
carandimage The place where Off-Topic is On-Topic
I used to think I was anal-retentive until I started getting involved in car forums
RE Servicing Costs. Why do we in Australia put up with this rip off?
Look at the VW UK deal:
From:Volkswagen offers fixed-price servicing package - Motoring News, Motoring - The Independent
Volkswagen is offering all buyers of its new cars a fixed-price deal that provides three years of routine servicing for a fee of £250. The price is the same for all models, so represents a particularly attractive offer for buyers of the company's more expensive and sophisticated models such as the Touareg 4x4 and the Phaeton luxury saloon. Coverage is restricted to the first 30,000 miles of the car's life.
The new plan builds on those which Volkswagen Finance has been offering on selected models since 2007, and is transferable to subsequent owners if a car is sold on during the coverage period. Existing Volkswagen owners and buyers of used Volkswagens won't miss out; they are being offered a separate fixed-price servicing plan priced at £299.
My Skoda pics are at: http://www.vwwatercooled.org.au/f35/...tml#post551162
Skoda also offer fixed price servicing in New Zealand.
For example:
Octavia vRS or Yeti 4 years / 60,000km - NZ$1950 or 6 years / 100,000km - NZ$4500.00
That's Aus$1500 and Aus$3500 at current exchange rates.
A Škoda Service Select package includes:
All scheduled maintenance up to the terms indicated
A set of brake pads is included in the 60,000 kilometre packages
A set of brake pads and discs is included in the 100,000 kilometre packages
A new set of front wiper blades at each service
Piece of mind in knowing that your vehicle is being serviced by trained technicians using genuine Škoda parts
Piece of mind in knowing how much your vehicle will cost to service
Protection from oil, parts and labour price increases
It's a very clever strategy because it totally locks owners into the Skoda network ensuring guaranteed business for the service departments and a chance to directly contact owners at the critical 60k and 100k times when many new car buyers trade their vehicles. If the policy is transferable (and there is no reason why it should not be) then it also adds to the resale value when you can sell a 50k or 60k car with a couple of years free servicing attached. Owner information will also always be up to date unlike many brands who know where the owner lived when they purchased the vehicle but who loose track of them fairly quickly after then.
Last edited by K1W1; 22-10-2010 at 05:33 PM.
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