Dude it's a Scirocco, not an i30.
If you wanted something you could jump into and never need to take proper care of (by that I mean regular inspections) you bought the wrong type of car.
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@Hillbilly
If you had perused the thread you would have seen the details and realised the comments and frustrations were regarding an engine fault that Volkswagen has been unable to fix. You would have also noticed the frequency for these service visits.You didn't say what for so I was right to assume that they should check it when you go in no matter what for.
As per this thread, that is not what I am talking about. Any technician with some nous would look at fluid levels while doing a diagnosis of an engine problem.You could have gone in for an unrelated problem and they wouldn't.
I had them on the car in April 2013 and were in uses for about three months.you have different sized wheels
One post saying that I have gone from 0 to 80 and had it timed with a stop watch.talking about 1/4 mile times
That was a Red Light to the Speed limit on the road.
My first issue with the car was two months after buying it. The wheels were on nearly 1.5 years later.Both will do nothing to enhance your reliability issues
Honestly, thinking back, when I picked it up, it was the first Scirocco R the dealers had seen and I was told by the sales manager that all the "boys" were so jealous of me taking the car away. It had 42KMs on it, compared to my other brand new cars it seems like a lot. I wonder if the "boys" took it out for a test drive on the local bendy hilly roads.
@Hillbilly
I am certain that is a fallacy. Thinking about new cars bought by the people around me in the last couple of years, only 3 out of the 8 people have looked at the manuals.The ones who don't join forums probably read and understand the manual and have enough nous to check things themselves.
@rjg
Fair enough
Don't get me wrong, it's a beautiful car and there is nothing on the road like it.
I am just fed up with the large amount of issues it has had.
The latest being, has it really chewed through all its oil in 9,000KMs? Going from new Oil Change Service which is brand new oil and oil filter to now being below minimum.
Or
Is VW Service not doing its job? They didn't change oil and filter but charged for it?
In other news, I have checked the oil level and it is at minimum.
I will get that sorted in the morning.
I've had my car since new & have done 125,000km. I can assure you that when it was new I checked the oil at every fuel stop - which is about 700km or every 1.5 weeks. As I got a feel for how much oil was (not) being used I adjusted the time period to suit. If I bought another car tomorrow I'd go back to checking every fill.
So what type of feel do you have for your oil usage?
LOL. They'll keep as high a standard as they can make a profit on, or more likely, what is available on the labour market. When I was at Capitol BMW (many years back) they had terrible problems attracting & retaining staff as the pay was lousy. I ended up going to fix aircraft as pay & conditions were better. I know shedloads of mechs that no longer follow the trade because the pay is so lousy.I am paying for a qualified, certified and trained professional to do a job. I am confident that Volkswagen keep a high standard.
Sorry, don't generally read that area.That is not my problem, if you read the Scirocco sub-forum you will know the history of my car and the issues that I am facing with it. This is just something on top and thus frustrating.
Couldn't agree more. If you want reliable & trouble free then don't buy a Euro or UK built vehicle - although in chasing a lower cost base, the Japanese seem to be starting to lower their standards now.Using Oil? My others cars have been Japanese made. Including a RX8, I know about Oil use. Have to say though compared to my Scirocco the Japanese cars have been more reliable and more trouble free.
Yes, I'm told that Audi treat their customers a bit better.Our Audi is now just over a year old and has only had a single window issue and Audi fixed that promptly. A world of difference in the experiences between the Volkswagen and the rest.
I'm talking in a general sense through-out the industry. No dealer is happy (the dealers pay for the training in my experience) wants to train up a tech & then have them leave so many are reluctant to send their guys on course (lose a days pay + course fees + lost revenue from the workshop), so they only send the long term staff. The new arrivals get disillusioned because they were promised shedloads of training & they bugger off elsewhere.That sounds horrible. I am shocked that Volkswagen would let that happen. I have had a tour of their head offices and seen all the training bays, yards and rooms for their technical updates.
Five Dock are even proud to say that they have an R division as they are trained better than the rest of standard Volkswagen mechanics.
I doubt Volkswagen are happy to waste thousands of man-hours on training and 10s of thousands of dollars on training to get a 1 out 10 qualified technician in VW.
I take my vehicle to a specialist independent (like Transporter). I'm aware that my mechanical skills are 20 years out of date & my toolbox & home workshop are crap, so I'm happy to pay for a workshop that I trust to keep an eye on my vehicle. I've come to know the owner of the shop & he looks after me if there's an emergency, lets me go in the workshop if I have my safety boots on, discusses my specific servicing needs, etc.The worst part about all you have said above is that it seems to be acceptable?
What you are saying is:
* The only way to keep my car going smoothly is NOT TO GO TO trained, certified, professional people to do the job.
* An unqualified, untrained, uncertified, unprofessional consumer is the answer.
If this is what Volkswagen Service is like, I have wasted a lot of money paying these Service agents.
Dealerships are for the birds as it's a gamble whether you'll get the top guy on the job or a dropkick that doesn't give a toss.
It's not really an option to go independant if you have warranty issues although mine diagnosed an N75 valve once & I took it back to the dealer for a warranty fix that was approved but never happened.
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I used to think I was anal-retentive until I started getting involved in car forums
@brad
You have to realize that you have experience and this seems to be (or was) your field. These type of things have nothing to do with my skills or my training. I only ask basic questions as I have little engineering knowledge (in theory), nothing specific to cars or engines.
I am an end user, if VW tell me to bring the car back to them and I ask them what else I need to do I will do it as I won't know any better until I ask questions.
An example is, when you bought your PC/MAC or Software or download Apps on your smartphone, what do you think of their EULA?
There are 4.7L of oil in your engine. The difference between the min and max mark on the dipstick is around a 0.5L, when the oil level gets just bellow the min mark, you need less than 1L of oil to bring the oil level to max. Your engine most likely used less than 25% or less of the oil which not bad at all. So, you're blaming someone else for neglecting your car when they service it, which is wrong. As Brad and others suggest, get into the habit taking some care (or at least the minimum what is required) of your car and stop relying on others and blaming them when you find out that there is something that doesn't look right to you.
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When you bought your car, the salesman should go through the basics of your car with you and most likely mentioned to you the owner's manual. All the basics you need to know how to SAFELY operate your car are in there, including some basic maintenance tasks. As the cars servicing intervals are becoming longer, the driver/owner has to pay more attention to those. There are some cars that have the servicing interval 24 months or 50,000km, which ever comes first and you can't choose the distance or time, which ever comes first it is. If, during that time you run out of brakes and kill some one on the road, you'd be 100% responsible, since it is clearly in the owners manual that some parts of the car like brakes and the tyres require more frequent checking - yeap, you guessed it, every 500km/weekly/or when you refuel.
Last edited by Transporter; 27-12-2013 at 08:13 AM.
Performance Tunes from $850Wrecking RS OCTAVIA 2 Link
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