Calm ourselves. Lets not implode. I think for many people VW Australia have started to catch up with other countries on a recall. Lets keep things polite and do what this forum does best - help each other. We are a band of brothers and sisters
There are many DSG's that are out of their 5 years warranty by now, unless I don't read the warranty policy right. Recalled DSG replacement components should be covered by the 2 years warranty, that's how I understand it, which doesn't mean that all DSGs will get extra 2 years warranty.
Now, to yours, that I don't use the facts; Many people here seem to have their minds affected somehow when they are accepting as the fact that women was killed in the Golf that suddenly lost speed, while she was hit by the truck from behind. The facts are that the accident can't be linked to the recall because the car had a manual gearbox and NOT DSG, the coroner didn't find that the car was at fault.
The sad thing is that it was aired on TV and used to push the recall ahead. If you think that it's right think to do? Then you have a much skewed thinking said politely.
You don't even have the facts how amny DSG failed and what caused it. I'm sorry sunshines who think that you or media knows better, but the only facts about the DSG failures are the one that come from VW or someone higher then them, NOT YOU.
Performance Tunes from $850Wrecking RS OCTAVIA 2 Link
Calm ourselves. Lets not implode. I think for many people VW Australia have started to catch up with other countries on a recall. Lets keep things polite and do what this forum does best - help each other. We are a band of brothers and sisters
MY18 GOLF 110TSI I HIGHLINE I Indium I Panoramic Sunroof I DAP I IP
MY18 TIGUAN 162TSI I R-LINE I Ruby I DAP I IP
Well it seems that the reasons for the accident have not yet been released by the Coroner per this line from a May31 article
QUOTE" The coroner is investigating what caused the crash and led to her death and will release the findings in July." UNQUOTE
So everyone is prejudging what the findings are when no one knows.
Perhaps everyone should settle down stop the name calling and wait for the letters to arrive.
My POLO is a 2010 and will probably be in the recall but am happy to wait and see what happens.
I have had a discussion with my wife who mainly drives it about not "Creeping" it in traffic and keeping the brake on solid till the lights
change to prevent clutch plates slipping and heating up. So far we havent had any problems except last week on idle it seemed to have
a pinging at idle Seemed to be in sync with a pulsing in a pipe across top of the engine (Injector maybe).
I have read the new VW Warranty regarding DSG and it says nothing about it being retrospective.
I would think that would be on case by case basis and to think anything else would be rather optimistic
In saying that it is obvious that some have had "Goodwill" repairs done to older models.
Last edited by Hillbilly; 15-06-2013 at 11:59 AM.
2021 Kamiq LE 110 , Moon White, BV cameras F & B
Mamba Ebike to replace Tiguan
Thankfully others have stuck up for my post. VW has extended dsg warranties in several countries throughout the world.. Russia was mentioned before and I've read in the US that a 10 year warranty is given on all dsg vehicles. I think 5 years is the least they could do for AUS customers.
Yep. I think this 5 years warranty on transmission, DSG or not, is what we have now as per VW Australia site...
Warranties < Technology & Service < Volkswagen Australia
New Vehicle Warranty
The New Vehicle Warranty is for 3 years unlimited kilometres.
The Transmission Warranty for passenger vehicles is for 5 years or 150,000 km, whichever comes first.
2011 Mk6 GTI | CW | DSG | Bi-Xenon | GIAC | APR TBE | THS FMIC | Modshack
DSG slow crawling driving wears clutches. Apparently this causes overheating.
When I back down my driveway I feather the brake to control my speed, is this causing the clutch to wear ?
The same would occur if you were driving slowly down a long sloping driveway ?.
I am pleased to have learnt not to use the hand brake with the motor running, is this true ?
Thanks forum.
Definitely!!! don't use the handbrake when stopped while its in any driving modes (R,D,S,M). The foot brake has been designed that when it is pushed it disengages the accelerator (and thus the clutches) but when you use the handbrake it doesn't and as a result it will slip the clutch for the entire time you have the brake on which makes them red hot and wears them out real quick.
This is the reason the electronic parking brake and auto hold features has now been implemented on new models - so people can't use the handbrake while its in a driving mode but they can take there foot off the brake with the auto hold feature.
When you are coasting or rolling down a hill you will see that the revs will go up and down. This is the gearbox clutches attempting to engage on a hill to apply engine breaking but because its not pulling the car down the hill (gravity is) it won't damage the clutches excessively. Yes any slipping of the clutch will wear it down and create heat but its the difference between the small force of engaging while rolling downhill or the clutch slipping heaps to pull a 1-2ton car up a hill.
This is where peek hour traffic kills these gearboxes sometimes its unavoidable to slip the clutches in traffic but the best practice I try to follow is don't move up unless there is at least 1-2 car spots in front of you. This gives the clutch time to engage fully. The other thing is don't take your foot off the brake, and give it no accelerator. This form of creaping is the worst for the clutches - especially up hills!
Remember this only really applies to the 7sp dry clutch. The 6sp wet clutch you can slip a lot more without a hickup becuase it has a mulitplate clutch (more durable and can take more force than a solid plate clutch) and the clutch is bathed in oil to keep them cool.
This should really be explained when the sales people are selling the cars. Horses for courses!
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