And therein lies the rub, right? I mean, they are saying "it is your fault. you don't know how to drive it." So how can they expect you to keep it? If they'd admit it was a flaw and is now fixed and this is how we fixed it, then maybe you'd have some restored faith. Sigh.
'11 GMC Sierra 1500; '98 Alfa 156 2.0TS; '08 Maser QP; '67 Coronet R/T; '13 Fiat 500c; '20 S90 T6; '22 MB Sprinter 2500 4x4 diesel; '97 Suzuki R Wagon; '96 Opel Astra; '11 Mini Cooper S
The disappointed idealist quote has been one I've used for decades (mostly as an excuse for my miserable attitude), but I didn't realize it originated w/ Mr. Carlin, the font of much wisdom.
Porsche recently did the same thing to my parents. My Mom complained about a low speed grinding noise for about a year. They couldn’t replicate it. Finally, when it was in for service and the warranty was up the mechanic figured out there was a problem which turned out to be the transfer case. The Cayenne was out of warranty, but they made the “Good Will Repair.” 17,000 miles later, the new transfer case went bad. Now here’s the kicker. If they had found the problem & covered it under warranty or if my parents had paid for the transfer case to be replaced it would have been covered under their 2 year/unlimited mileage replacement parts warranty. Because it was replaced as a “Good Will Repair,” even though it failed 17,000 miles later, my parents were on the hook for $2,500. The service advisor called Porsche on our behalf and got them to pay half. I called and got them to pay a little more. It cost my parents somewhere around $800.
Sounds like VW is giving you this good will repair, but not a warranty repair so they don’t have to cover it in the even it happens again.
2001 Prelude Type SH, 2022 Highlander XLE AWD, 2023 Toyota Tacoma SR 4WD
That's about where I was at with my brand new lemon Pontiac G6, if I didn't qualify for the lemon law buyback. And I was in a lot worse position, financially, to replace a vehicle than I am now, but at some point, enough is enough.
This whole fiasco makes me feel somewhat better about having two cheap-ish late model (but way out of warranty) vehicles that I like, because I know that if something breaks, it will be on me, and I bought them at a much lower than new price to account for that eventuality.
@breld- I think you have a great attitude through all of this. I’d get it fixed under warranty and see if they offer an explanation of what failed and If they are providing any warranty on the new parts.
Then you will dump it and get something else 😁
This makes me wonder what warranty is in force for their DSG transmissions since they are automated manual transmissions.
I was about to ask just that - doesn't the VW have hill hold? Denver is hilly, but I think you'd have to try very hard to wear out a clutch in 9,000 miles with that feature. Nice that they're covering it, but also disappointing that it's "goodwill" and not because they concluded that the dealer made an incorrect diagnosis.
Hill hold applies the brake, rather than slipping the clutch. The Tacoma has the same type of system. Training wheels for new stick shift drivers. If anything, it would reduce clutch wear, not increase it.
I was about to ask just that - doesn't the VW have hill hold? Denver is hilly, but I think you'd have to try very hard to wear out a clutch in 9,000 miles with that feature. Nice that they're covering it, but also disappointing that it's "goodwill" and not because they concluded that the dealer made an incorrect diagnosis.
Hill hold applies the brake, rather than slipping the clutch. The Tacoma has the same type of system. Training wheels for new stick shift drivers. If anything, it would reduce clutch wear, not increase it.
You're right on how it works, but the theory that it reduces clutch wear is apparently not the case with VW Hill Hold. If you look over on VW Vortex, there are lots of accounts of Hill Hold waiting too long to release causing people to stall because they release the clutch before the car is actually moving. The solution is folks effectively riding the clutch for 2-4 seconds longer than necessary for the hill hold to release.
Again, not saying this is root cause here, but I can absolutely see this causing additional unnecessary clutch wear.
those get warranted as an AT. Almost positive at that.
They do, but you have to the follow the maintenance schedule religiously - a minor deviation and you'll be on your own.
That’s what grinds me about VW/Audi’s service schedule. Apparently you have to specifically ask for the DSG fluid change at 40k, and Audi’s prepaid maintenance plan doesn’t include it.
I was about to ask just that - doesn't the VW have hill hold? Denver is hilly, but I think you'd have to try very hard to wear out a clutch in 9,000 miles with that feature. Nice that they're covering it, but also disappointing that it's "goodwill" and not because they concluded that the dealer made an incorrect diagnosis.
Hill hold applies the brake, rather than slipping the clutch. The Tacoma has the same type of system. Training wheels for new stick shift drivers. If anything, it would reduce clutch wear, not increase it.
Exactly what I meant - in theory, much harder to burn the clutch with the hill hold feature, although 28ff’s post indicates that maybe VW implemented it incorrectly (big surprise, there). Still doesn’t explain the clutch going to the floor as a result of misuse.
Anyone else notice that the idiots who don’t like or don’t trust new safety features are exactly the ones who need them? My neighbors have a new RAV4 Hybrid. I’m sure it has automatic LED headlights, yet, I see them drive off into the night with no lights and no DRLs, I assume because they left the light switch in the “off” position instead of “DRL” or “Auto.”
GM does this right for the average driver. You get full control over the lights, until you cycle the ignition, then it goes back to automatic. There is no option to permanently turn the lights off which survives an ignition cycle.
The cars made in the last 15+ years which have permanently illuminated instrument clusters have only made this problem worse. People tend to think their lights are on because the instruments are fully lit, however, they’re lit regardless of whether the lights are on.
Anyone else notice that the idiots who don’t like or don’t trust new safety features are exactly the ones who need them? My neighbors have a new RAV4 Hybrid. I’m sure it has automatic LED headlights, yet, I see them drive off into the night with no lights and no DRLs, I assume because they left the light switch in the “off” position instead of “DRL” or “Auto.”
It seems to almost always be a Toyolex product with no lights around here. I want to be nice and say that is just because the brand sells so much, but I bet there's more to it. For late model cars with auto lights, it is 100% feckless drivers.
Anyone else notice that the idiots who don’t like or don’t trust new safety features are exactly the ones who need them? My neighbors have a new RAV4 Hybrid. I’m sure it has automatic LED headlights, yet, I see them drive off into the night with no lights and no DRLs, I assume because they left the light switch in the “off” position instead of “DRL” or “Auto.”
GM does this right for the average driver. You get full control over the lights, until you cycle the ignition, then it goes back to automatic. There is no option to permanently turn the lights off which survives an ignition cycle.
The cars made in the last 15+ years which have permanently illuminated instrument clusters have only made this problem worse. People tend to think their lights are on because the instruments are fully lit, however, they’re lit regardless of whether the lights are on.
Recently I’ve noticed this more and more. Drivers navigating in the dark on interstates and other roads not aware their headlights, taillights are dark and others can barely see their vehicle until they’re right on them or too late. On my drive home tonight I saw two late model vehicles doing the same.
2021 VW Arteon SEL 4-motion, 2018 VW Passat SE w/tech, 2016 Audi Q5 Premium Plus w/tech
There seems to be zero enforcement, too. If I were working traffic, I’d pull over someone with no headlights or who didn’t use turn signals way before I’d nab a speeder.
FWIW, Denver - especially the part of town that @breld and I live in - is not that hilly. @breld is practically on the prairie, part of the way to Kansas.
And therein lies the rub, right? I mean, they are saying "it is your fault. you don't know how to drive it." So how can they expect you to keep it? If they'd admit it was a flaw and is now fixed and this is how we fixed it, then maybe you'd have some restored faith. Sigh.
Driver fault is probably their go to response these days since so few people even know how to drive standard shift any more. I have seen some so called professional drivers who are brutal on clutches. At my old job the mechanics knew which buses would need premature clutch replacement because who they were assigned to.
2019 Kia Soul+, 2015 Mustang GT, 2013 Ford F-150, 2000 Chrysler Sebring convertible
Anyone else notice that the idiots who don’t like or don’t trust new safety features are exactly the ones who need them? My neighbors have a new RAV4 Hybrid. I’m sure it has automatic LED headlights, yet, I see them drive off into the night with no lights and no DRLs, I assume because they left the light switch in the “off” position instead of “DRL” or “Auto.”
GM does this right for the average driver. You get full control over the lights, until you cycle the ignition, then it goes back to automatic. There is no option to permanently turn the lights off which survives an ignition cycle.
The cars made in the last 15+ years which have permanently illuminated instrument clusters have only made this problem worse. People tend to think their lights are on because the instruments are fully lit, however, they’re lit regardless of whether the lights are on.
That happened to me the other day. Couldn’t see the controls in the dark and assumed the headlights were on because I saw illumination forward. Turns out I was on daytime running lights and had nothing lit out back. Didn’t realize it until I stopped for gas.
Another reason I hate automatic nannies.
2019 Kia Soul+, 2015 Mustang GT, 2013 Ford F-150, 2000 Chrysler Sebring convertible
auto lights are the best. Though I do have to remember to check the setting after getting the car back from service because they usually turn them off, and sometimes forget to turn them back on.
Ha Ha... it wasn't mine either. No matter how much I beat on that little Elantra it simply wouldn't get under 30.
As for auto lights.. yes they are great. I can only think of one car I've owned that didn't have them and it was the 2008 Elantra. Even my crank window 99 S10 had them (or was that a 98, I can't remember now)
2023 Mercedes EQE 350 4Matic / 2022 Ram 1500 Bighorn, Built to Serve
@breld.....I’m livid about your VW experience....and it’s not even my car.
For no other reason than to let your feelings known, I’d find out who the president of VW North America is, and write him/her a strongly worded message about your disappointment.
It’s no like VW hasn’t had enough customer service problems based on their diesel fiasco.
No consolation, but I was relaying your story to my son last night. He empathizes but isn’t surprised. While he hasn’t had anything major go wrong with his GTI, he’s not a fan of VW’s service depts at the two VW dealers he’s had service done. I guess same sort of arrogance, claiming owner error when getting warranty work done.
I think the green “lights on” indicators are deceptive because, for decades, the primary indicator that your lights are on in low light conditions when it’s not completely dark (and light enough that you can’t clearly see the headlights light up the road) has been that the instruments are lit.
The Audi A4 I leased had manual lights and semi-permanently lit gauges. If it got dark and you didn’t turn the lights on, the gauges would fade to dark and you couldn’t see anything other than the needles until you turned the lights on. I liked that setup, except, why go to all that trouble and not include an auto lamp function?
Thanks @graphicguy - I appreciate the words and empathy.
And yes @stickguy - at this point, we aren't doing a thing more until the repair is done and paid for (by them). Because...
Service department called this morning to update us that the repair has in fact not been formally approved yet because they need to take apart the car and take photos and video and send it to the VW rep to then formally cover the repair cost. He said there was a cost of the labor just to get to that point is something like $1,300 and that we had to authorize that to take the next step. Now...I thought they were asking us to front that money and then get reimbursed assuming the repair was approved under warranty (or goodwill or whatever). But it was a simple matter of hearing us say we authorize it.
Here's what I think happened - the rep who was there yesterday gave the informal go ahead that it would be covered. Then they got word that my wife and I have actually requested a buyback of the vehicle. So now he's feeling like they can't fast track it and need to go through the formal process of evaluation.
Truth is we never believed they would buy back the vehicle, but we thought it was worth asking - in good conscience, I can say that we truly will not be comfortable in that vehicle going forward. But it would seem perhaps our posturing has caused them to backtrack a little.
As long as it gets done. And man, this is one complicated clutch. I didn’t think they were this complicated, unless it’s a mini that you need to take off the front end.
Maybe just because of the AWD system? I’ll assume a GTI is a bit simpler.
Also, how can they up front deny a claim, when they just admitted they have no idea what went wrong? Technically this might not even be a clutch problem. Lots of other parts involved. Maybe a casting defect led to a linkage somewhere breaking.
The reason is because the assumption on the part of all involved is that the only reason a clutch fails is due to driver misuse. We all know and have discussed that almost conclusively is not the case here.
The more I think about this, the more silly this is. Wouldn't it be better of VW to say "Look, our experience says the most common failure reason for a clutch is driver misuse. But, we also recognize given the low mileage and the manner of failure, that something else may have failed that contributed and if that is the case we will take it up with VWoA. We need you to authorize us to take apart the car and look." Much better customer service and not outright calling the customer a crummy driver...
Yes, that would be a very appropriate response. I get the sense everyone on their end speaks out of fear of the generally litigious environment.
Wife and I were talking about it - if they're willing to cover the repair, there's nothing else to be afraid of. While we would like them to simply take the car back, we also recognize that the situation is this - there was a failure on the car, no one was injured and they cover the cost of the repair. Simple as that.
Yes, that would be a very appropriate response. I get the sense everyone on their end speaks out of fear of the generally litigious environment.
Wife and I were talking about it - if they're willing to cover the repair, there's nothing else to be afraid of. While we would like them to simply take the car back, we also recognize that the situation is this - there was a failure on the car, no one was injured and they cover the cost of the repair. Simple as that.
To me, the bigger question would be whether it was a random parts failure or rather a design flaw in the clutch system that caused the premature failure. While I haven't heard anything that would lead me to think it is the latter, the take rate on the manuals is much lower so it is hard to know, and that would be reason enough to flip it before it happens again.
This hits at the heart of dealerships, manufacturers and their relationship with their customer base. The customer always seems to be the culprit in these types of situations. The dealership didn’t even do any sort of investigation, and automatically assumed the @breld family had abused the car.
I’m of the mind that those who abuse their cars are far in the minority compared to honest folk who have a failure when a car leaves you stranded. Clearly, VW doesn’t see it that way, which is too bad. i thought they built pretty nice, well engineered vehicles. More and more evidence makes me wary of that belief.
I think I heard that VW will not provide a loaner until it's determined that the failure is covered by warranty. OK, but they more than likey are back peddling and pretty much have agreed that they are going to make the repair. Maybe they will use the technically that the repair is going to be made as a "good will" repair not warranty. Therefore, no loaner car by VW but there is no law that says the dealer can't provide a loaner so that they can show "good will" towards their customer. It's worth asking since we know that, "if you don't ask...you don't get".
jmonroe
'15 Genesis V8 with Ultimate Package and '18 Legacy Limited 6 cyl
Thanks @graphicguy - I appreciate the words and empathy.
And yes @stickguy - at this point, we aren't doing a thing more until the repair is done and paid for (by them). Because...
Service department called this morning to update us that the repair has in fact not been formally approved yet because they need to take apart the car and take photos and video and send it to the VW rep to then formally cover the repair cost. He said there was a cost of the labor just to get to that point is something like $1,300 and that we had to authorize that to take the next step. Now...I thought they were asking us to front that money and then get reimbursed assuming the repair was approved under warranty (or goodwill or whatever). But it was a simple matter of hearing us say we authorize it.
Here's what I think happened - the rep who was there yesterday gave the informal go ahead that it would be covered. Then they got word that my wife and I have actually requested a buyback of the vehicle. So now he's feeling like they can't fast track it and need to go through the formal process of evaluation.
Truth is we never believed they would buy back the vehicle, but we thought it was worth asking - in good conscience, I can say that we truly will not be comfortable in that vehicle going forward. But it would seem perhaps our posturing has caused them to backtrack a little.
So they’re punishing you for daring to not want their defective car?
2019 Kia Soul+, 2015 Mustang GT, 2013 Ford F-150, 2000 Chrysler Sebring convertible
It seems to almost always be a Toyolex product with no lights around here. I want to be nice and say that is just because the brand sells so much, but I bet there's more to it. For late model cars with auto lights, it is 100% feckless drivers.
It is a really sad case, too, when it is Japanese brands going around without lights, since you can set any of them to "on" and just leave them there, always, and never have to think about it. You're right, though; it does tend to be the Toyota brand that I see going around without lights.
2018 Subaru Crosstrek, 2014 Audi Q7 TDI, 2013 Subaru Forester, 2013 Ford F250 Lariat D, 1976 Ford F250, 1969 Chevrolet C20, 1969 Ford Econoline 100
Thanks @graphicguy - I appreciate the words and empathy.
And yes @stickguy - at this point, we aren't doing a thing more until the repair is done and paid for (by them). Because...
Service department called this morning to update us that the repair has in fact not been formally approved yet because they need to take apart the car and take photos and video and send it to the VW rep to then formally cover the repair cost. He said there was a cost of the labor just to get to that point is something like $1,300 and that we had to authorize that to take the next step. Now...I thought they were asking us to front that money and then get reimbursed assuming the repair was approved under warranty (or goodwill or whatever). But it was a simple matter of hearing us say we authorize it.
Here's what I think happened - the rep who was there yesterday gave the informal go ahead that it would be covered. Then they got word that my wife and I have actually requested a buyback of the vehicle. So now he's feeling like they can't fast track it and need to go through the formal process of evaluation.
Truth is we never believed they would buy back the vehicle, but we thought it was worth asking - in good conscience, I can say that we truly will not be comfortable in that vehicle going forward. But it would seem perhaps our posturing has caused them to backtrack a little.
So they’re punishing you for daring to not want their defective car?
Today's update sounds like they want to take another bite of the apple at the owner's peril. By rights you could tell them to go pound sand in the rat holes! They already made a deal with the owner. So maybe just don't respond to any "revised" updates.
"Yesterday I accepted the factory offer to repair my car at no expense to me. Let me know when it's ready for delivery. Thank you."
A time to embrace, and a time to refrain from embracing.
yow, just catching up and seeing about the VW clutch failure near the tunnel, wow that stinks. sounds like a low-$ failure of a part that is one of the more failure-prone on a stickshift car: the clutch "secondary" (slave) cylinder, the one under the clutch pedal. They sure do fail randomly, on any stickshift car, but would be covered up until 12 months & 12k miles on a new car. A dealer mechanic showed me how my Z28 with failed slave cylinder could be "driven" in very short bursts very short distances using starter motor after forcing shifter into #1 (or reverse) gear, giving time for starter motor to cool between each burst.
btw, Sometimes the secondary clutch cylinders will start making weird loud clicking noises before they fail (that one camaro clutch did so).
ps no way i would seriously go near coworker's Cayenne, whether the transfer case repair was $200 or $2000. I am fascinated by the stickshift aspect - we will probably see the vehicle in Hemmings Motor News or a TV car auction some day.
BTW if that alltrack with failed clutch had a diesel engine to go with the stickshift then I would probably buy it myself (PUNCH!) . No more VWs for me, but I've owned 5 and they were fine family vehicles too - no strandings. The one gasser was a 1965 beetle. I traded my final VW (2006 jetta TDI) just as the camshaft started dissolving right on schedule around 130k miles causing alarming misses on the highway. Also I've owned 25 vehicles and have seen many more clutch issues due to broken parts and only rarely/recently have I had to replace a clutch, once on a Lancer bought used for a son, and that same year on an 05 GTO with 80k ($3800 for new clutch due to dissolved pilot/needle bearings, including transmission input shaft for $700).
Nice - that is awesome how the truck grips sideways onto the wall. Blizzaks? but seriously, looking good, dude, and what is in the bed of the truck, live chickens? Sorry if i missed a posting or two in there, NYC chicken-raising guy.
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'11 GMC Sierra 1500; '98 Alfa 156 2.0TS; '08 Maser QP; '67 Coronet R/T; '13 Fiat 500c; '20 S90 T6; '22 MB Sprinter 2500 4x4 diesel; '97 Suzuki R Wagon; '96 Opel Astra; '11 Mini Cooper S
Sounds like VW is giving you this good will repair, but not a warranty repair so they don’t have to cover it in the even it happens again.
2001 Prelude Type SH, 2022 Highlander XLE AWD, 2023 Toyota Tacoma SR 4WD
This whole fiasco makes me feel somewhat better about having two cheap-ish late model (but way out of warranty) vehicles that I like, because I know that if something breaks, it will be on me, and I bought them at a much lower than new price to account for that eventuality.
Then you will dump it and get something else 😁
This makes me wonder what warranty is in force for their DSG transmissions since they are automated manual transmissions.
2020 Acura RDX tech SH-AWD, 2023 Maverick hybrid Lariat luxury package.
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Again, not saying this is root cause here, but I can absolutely see this causing additional unnecessary clutch wear.
GM does this right for the average driver. You get full control over the lights, until you cycle the ignition, then it goes back to automatic. There is no option to permanently turn the lights off which survives an ignition cycle.
The cars made in the last 15+ years which have permanently illuminated instrument clusters have only made this problem worse. People tend to think their lights are on because the instruments are fully lit, however, they’re lit regardless of whether the lights are on.
2021 VW Arteon SEL 4-motion, 2018 VW Passat SE w/tech, 2016 Audi Q5 Premium Plus w/tech
Well, I have friend in Kentucky who I don't think falls into that category. Maybe we'll hear from him.
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2023 Mercedes EQE 350 4Matic / 2022 Ram 1500 Bighorn, Built to Serve
2019 Kia Soul+, 2015 Mustang GT, 2013 Ford F-150, 2000 Chrysler Sebring convertible
Another reason I hate automatic nannies.
2019 Kia Soul+, 2015 Mustang GT, 2013 Ford F-150, 2000 Chrysler Sebring convertible
2020 Acura RDX tech SH-AWD, 2023 Maverick hybrid Lariat luxury package.
2023 Mercedes EQE 350 4Matic / 2022 Ram 1500 Bighorn, Built to Serve
2020 Acura RDX tech SH-AWD, 2023 Maverick hybrid Lariat luxury package.
As for auto lights.. yes they are great. I can only think of one car I've owned that didn't have them and it was the 2008 Elantra. Even my crank window 99 S10 had them (or was that a 98, I can't remember now)
2023 Mercedes EQE 350 4Matic / 2022 Ram 1500 Bighorn, Built to Serve
2020 Acura RDX tech SH-AWD, 2023 Maverick hybrid Lariat luxury package.
For no other reason than to let your feelings known, I’d find out who the president of VW North America is, and write him/her a strongly worded message about your disappointment.
It’s no like VW hasn’t had enough customer service problems based on their diesel fiasco.
No consolation, but I was relaying your story to my son last night. He empathizes but isn’t surprised. While he hasn’t had anything major go wrong with his GTI, he’s not a fan of VW’s service depts at the two VW dealers he’s had service done. I guess same sort of arrogance, claiming owner error when getting warranty work done.
Must be a VWoA thing.
2020 Acura RDX tech SH-AWD, 2023 Maverick hybrid Lariat luxury package.
The Audi A4 I leased had manual lights and semi-permanently lit gauges. If it got dark and you didn’t turn the lights on, the gauges would fade to dark and you couldn’t see anything other than the needles until you turned the lights on. I liked that setup, except, why go to all that trouble and not include an auto lamp function?
And yes @stickguy - at this point, we aren't doing a thing more until the repair is done and paid for (by them). Because...
Service department called this morning to update us that the repair has in fact not been formally approved yet because they need to take apart the car and take photos and video and send it to the VW rep to then formally cover the repair cost. He said there was a cost of the labor just to get to that point is something like $1,300 and that we had to authorize that to take the next step. Now...I thought they were asking us to front that money and then get reimbursed assuming the repair was approved under warranty (or goodwill or whatever). But it was a simple matter of hearing us say we authorize it.
Here's what I think happened - the rep who was there yesterday gave the informal go ahead that it would be covered. Then they got word that my wife and I have actually requested a buyback of the vehicle. So now he's feeling like they can't fast track it and need to go through the formal process of evaluation.
Truth is we never believed they would buy back the vehicle, but we thought it was worth asking - in good conscience, I can say that we truly will not be comfortable in that vehicle going forward. But it would seem perhaps our posturing has caused them to backtrack a little.
2024 Audi Q8 e-tron - 2017 911 C4S - 2023 A6 Allroad - 2024 Genesis GV60 - 2019 Cayman
Maybe just because of the AWD system? I’ll assume a GTI is a bit simpler.
2020 Acura RDX tech SH-AWD, 2023 Maverick hybrid Lariat luxury package.
Clown show.
2020 Acura RDX tech SH-AWD, 2023 Maverick hybrid Lariat luxury package.
Wife and I were talking about it - if they're willing to cover the repair, there's nothing else to be afraid of. While we would like them to simply take the car back, we also recognize that the situation is this - there was a failure on the car, no one was injured and they cover the cost of the repair. Simple as that.
2024 Audi Q8 e-tron - 2017 911 C4S - 2023 A6 Allroad - 2024 Genesis GV60 - 2019 Cayman
I’m of the mind that those who abuse their cars are far in the minority compared to honest folk who have a failure when a car leaves you stranded. Clearly, VW doesn’t see it that way, which is too bad. i thought they built pretty nice, well engineered vehicles. More and more evidence makes me wary of that belief.
2020 Acura RDX tech SH-AWD, 2023 Maverick hybrid Lariat luxury package.
jmonroe
'15 Genesis V8 with Ultimate Package and '18 Legacy Limited 6 cyl
2025 Forester Limited, 2024 Subaru Legacy Sport
2019 Kia Soul+, 2015 Mustang GT, 2013 Ford F-150, 2000 Chrysler Sebring convertible
2024 Audi Q8 e-tron - 2017 911 C4S - 2023 A6 Allroad - 2024 Genesis GV60 - 2019 Cayman
"Yesterday I accepted the factory offer to repair my car at no expense to me. Let me know when it's ready for delivery. Thank you."
2001 Prelude Type SH, 2022 Highlander XLE AWD, 2023 Toyota Tacoma SR 4WD
btw, Sometimes the secondary clutch cylinders will start making weird loud clicking noises before they fail (that one camaro clutch did so).
ps no way i would seriously go near coworker's Cayenne, whether the transfer case repair was $200 or $2000. I am fascinated by the stickshift aspect - we will probably see the vehicle in Hemmings Motor News or a TV car auction some day.