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Just received a call from "American Honda" seems they are different than "Canadian Honda" Since my product as he says is a "Gray Market" vehicle we are in the "Twilight Zone". No one wants to accept responsibility for this vehicle. Therefore be careful where you buy a Honda, because they will find a loophole to keep from fixing THEIR FAULTY PRODUCT. I will process complaint papers in the state of New York. I am not a satisfied customer. I will not own another Honda. The gentleman I spoke to from Honda of America, said that a Honda is not a Honda, and that Honda's built in other countries are inferior products. The dealer should be penalized for bringing cars across the border just to increase his sales, and then not standing behind the product.
can you register your VIN on the Honda's Owner-Link web-site? If so, do you have access to Recall information and Warrenty information?
IF the battery fails you can take that result to your dealer and stomp on the service manager's desk about why they're wasting your time over a $20 battery for them to replace under warranty.
2014 Malibu 2LT, 2015 Cruze 2LT,
A couple of comments:
First, I was under the impression that all North American Market Odysseys (this would include Canadian models) were built in Alabama. It would be news to me that Canadian Odysseys are built in Canada.
Second, is the replacement transmission specific to Canadian Odysseys? In other words, if you agreed to replace the transmission, would it have to come from Canada?
Third, what if you were still living in Canada, the car was registered in Canada and you were in the States on a vacation? And you went in for some minor warantee repair? Would the dealership point you to a Canadian dealership or would they do the warantee work?
Something smells rotten about this whole deal to me. Who pays for the replacement (Honda of Canada or Honda of America) shouldn't make a damn bit of difference and you shouldn't have to be the intermediary to get the two to talk to each other. You just want the car fixed and THEY should figure out amoungst themselves who's going to pay for it.
Your beef should be taken-up absolutely 100% with the dealer that sold you this vehicle. Take it back to them and do some complaining. I agree with Honda (and Dodge, Chevy, Ford) on this, used cars shouldn't be transported between countries and then expect the manufacturer (sometimes a seperate entity all together like in Hondas case) to honor the warranty.
as for the "they don't build them anymore" this i don't believe is true. undoubtedly, if anyone were getting their transmission replaced it would be a rebuilt one. there are rebuilts out there you can be sure.
I think that the odds are against both wheel bearings going bad at 2500 miles, but maybe that just replaced the wrong one?
If it's not the bearing, where do we go from here? It doesn't sound like tires, but maybe it's a tire.
Just thought I would let you know, in case they hadn't mentioned it.
I have a 2000 EX in California. so far, the transmission is ok (knocking on wood). however, having read your experiences, i am not sure if I should wait at the sideline or do something. I have about 60k miles and purchased the 100k/0 deductible warranty (thinking that the automatic doors would fail). I read that the 100k is automatically extended for the transmission for model year 99 - 03??? What do you advise? i am thinking:
1. trade it in for another one. but just bought another car and don't want 2 car payments, if possible.
2. continue to pray and change the transmission fluid frequently
3. start the process to see if honda detects if there is a problem and hopeful a swap.
I am also thinking that "if it aint broken, don't fix it".
I am interested in your thoughts.
thanks
Richard
Good luck...
1) Until the Alabama plant came on line in '02, I am pretty sure that all North American Odyssey's were built in Canada. I believe vin numbers that begin with 2 are Canada, 5 is from the USA.
2) The selling dealer telling you to find a tranny is nonsense. Honda is making them available to the dealers to support vehicles in the field, especially as they are an extended warranty item. IIRC, by law they have to make parts available for 10 years???? Yes, there could be constraints and delays, but read this board and note how many others are still getting their units replaced.
3) You are, unfortunately, a victim of fraud, and you will have to fight this on that basis. I am sure Eliot Spitzer (NYS attorney general's office) would love to hear about a case like this. It doesn't hurt to keep American Honda on notice, but ultimately, this will be an issue between the dealer and Honda to work out. Probably it will come out of the dealers pocket, at they are the ones that took the risk, and did the act.
4) Long shot: Google "Honda Worldwide" and register a complaint with the Japanese overlords about the screwing you are taking as the result of dealer fraud and Honda of America & Canada's indifference to the situation.
Steve
Transmissions are still available.
Grey Market - just about all automakers started clamping down on Canadian spec vehicles being resold in the US. People were taking advantage of the favorable exchange rate and the fact that in Canada vehicles were priced less than in the US due to market conditions. Lots of dealers - including Honda dealers - were going to Canada and buying up Odysseys and reselling them as USED.
runaround - didn't it bother you when you bought it that you were paying MSRP for a USED vehicle? Also, when they changed out the speedometer/odometer your vehicle went into a total mileage unknown status. Are you aware of the resale hit you took? Not to sound like a jerk, but didn't you think your were outsmarting other folks who had to wait or pay over MSRP back then? You can't have your cake and eat it too.
Honda of America and Honda of Canada are 2 distinct companies. Their policy is that if the vehicle wasn't originally registered in Canada, it's a grey market car. Warranty is void. Now if you were a resident of Canada and registered the vehicle there and then moved or visited the US, you would be covered. Every manufacturer afaik has the same policy.
There was a huge thread on it a couple-three years back here. Search for "Buying in Canada".
I agree, your beef is with the dealer who promised you the world. Work with them or the NYS attorney general's office.
I wish you luck.
I am due to receive my vehicle tomorrow with a brand new transmission.
I am due to receive my vehicle tomorrow with a brand new transmission.
Anybody else have this A/C problem????
My '05 Ody has 10k miles, and for the past 3 days I have experienced a rough idle at 700 rpms. The roughness/vibration can be felt in the steering column and the pedals. As I accelerate the vibration worsens, and the roughness continues throughout my drive - if anything it improves over 50 mph, but will worsen if the VCM kicks in. It almost feels like a exhaust leak, but I don't know if it's something more serious. It can't be a wheel bearing since it occurs when I'm idling.
By description, any reply is only a guess, as to my guess its possibly a bad spark plug or injector, not sure if it can be the module for the same cyclinder as it should trigger the "Check Engine" light. Good Luck!
Also any way to reprogram the dash board lights to stay on when the headlights are on but the car is off? Or have the dash dimned when the lights are off? The problem is when its around dusk the most important time to have your headlights on. The dash is all lite up and it appears the headlights are on.
What year is your van? There is a new recall for the 2005 model (bad sensor).
2020 Acura RDX tech SH-AWD, 2023 Maverick hybrid Lariat luxury package.
I also have a vibration in the steering wheel while traveling over 55MPH. I have new tires and I had tried a few times to rebalance the wheels, and it still vibrated. I even replaced the wheels with brand new aftermarket wheels from tirerack.com and it still does it. Does anyone have any suggestions as to what it could be???
P.S. My wife is about to kick my butt if I don't get her van fixed soon. HELP!!!
this is where operational knowlege (how is the system designed and why would this problem exhibit itself) vs. prescriptive knowlege (how do i follow a diagnostic checklist or flowchart, what do i pull off, etc) comes into play. the really good mechs must have a lot of experience, have seen and read a lot, have tried many things, etc.
yes, the good thing is they acknowlege there is a problem. please update everyone.
aren't you glad you brought the vehicle in for diagnosis earlier rather than later?
I did a search of these boards but have not found anything like this problem.
I have a 2001 Odyssey with 53K mileage. For the last few days I noticed an odor. I then saw that the carpet mats in front of the drivers seat were soaked with water. I told my wife who said that she had noticed water build up on the carpet in front of the passenger seats.
Not being able to drop off the vehicle yet, I quickly stopped by the dealership's repair center. The drop off person believed it could be possible that this involves some kind of blockage of the air conditioner's drainage. I made an appointment to drop of the van on Friday. He said $95 to diagnose, which would be subtracted if a repair was needed.
The usual questions:
1- Anyone ever heard of this type of problem?
2- Anyone concur with the initial diagnosis (besides me)?
3- Sould this type of problem be covered under warranty?
4- If this is not warranty work, how much is reasonable for labor?
5- What type of parts are most likely needed to be replaced? How much should they be?
6- While I'm at it, should I just get the 60K service done?
Thanks,
Felix
you need to keep the area below the windshield (with the hood open) free of debris. do this periodically.
$95 to diagnose is pretty steep, specially when all they are likely to do is the same I just mentioned.
go to a local garage and ask if they'll use their compressor and blow air up the drain tube.
if that unclogs it, you might want to pull your glovebox, and remove a cross-member to get at the pollen filter and see what sort of junk is in there.
I think a pollen filter job is on the order of 100-120 so it seems the garage isn't doing you much of a favor.
hope it helps.