What VW is offering...
 

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[Closed] What VW is offering diesel owners in the USA.

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A few on here may be interested in this. My brother in the USA has a 2 litre Jetta diesel. He's just emailed this to me:

From: "VW Class Action Info - LCHB" <vw-classaction@lchb.com>
To: (deleted)
Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2016 12:35:42 AM
Subject: Volkswagen Class Action Litigation Update

We are writing to provide you with an update on the Volkswagen “Clean Diesel” class action litigation.

This morning, the Court held a status conference to address the parties’ ongoing settlement negotiations. The parties have made substantial progress in the negotiations, and are on track to publically file the terms of the settlement on June 21, 2016. Judge Charles Breyer stated that the proposed settlement will accomplish three major objectives:

First, the settlements address noncompliant 2-liter-engine cars currently on the road. By Volkswagen offering to buy back or to terminate the lease for each vehicle, or, at no cost to the consumer, and subject to Government approval after further testing, by the consumer choosing to have Volkswagen modify the vehicles to reduce the emissions in accordance with the requirements set by EPA and CARB.

Second, in addition -- and I want to emphasize this. In addition to the buy-back or modification, the settlement pays substantial monetary compensation to the proposed class of 2-liter-engine owners and lessees.

Third, the settlement requires Volkswagen to pay money into a fund that will support environmental remediation. In addition, Volkswagen will be required to commit other funds to promote green automotive technology.

None of these settlement benefits will be reduced by the payment of attorneys’ fees and costs.
Judge Breyer also noted that engineering studies and testing on the 3.0-liter diesel vehicles are ongoing, and the parties will work diligently to resolve the claims for those vehicles.

We have attached a copy of this morning’s hearing transcript for your reference, and will continue to send you updates on the litigation. Given that the Court’s confidentiality order remains in effect, we currently cannot provide any further detail beyond what Judge Breyer disclosed at the hearing. You can stay updated on upcoming proceedings and important case documents from the Court’s official website on this case, available here: http://cand.uscourts.gov/crb/vwmdl.

United States District Court, Northern District of California
cand.uscourts.gov
Due to the level of interest in this case, this web page has been created to notify journalists and interested members of the public of important news and information ...


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 12:22 pm
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Substantial compensation to the owners? Really? How substantially have they been inconvenienced by this, other than the time taken to take their car in?


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 12:27 pm
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I'm not surprised, you won't get anything like that in the UK though.

It will be a fixed car and a free service or hand your car back early on the PCP and some money in to the deposit for a different one.


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 12:31 pm
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Maybe we are simply not litigious enough in the UK?


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 12:32 pm
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As above, this is happening in America, the good ol' USA does love a compensation lawsuit!


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 12:32 pm
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"How substantially have they been inconvenienced by this, other than the time taken to take their car in?"

i'd have thought that resale value/ease of resale would be an issue and compensation should cover this


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 12:36 pm
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^ And the lessees?


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 12:55 pm
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i'd have thought that resale value/ease of resale would be an issue

Really? Is the car going to be worse after this?


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 1:02 pm
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OP yes thanks for that. Yes US owners are being properly compensated and promptly while in Europe where Germany holds sway at the EU - didly F squat. The letter UK owners have says pretty much zero other than your car is affected. Frankly its outrageous

@molgrips major major pita, what if younare vw owner and wanted to sell your car, where are resale values ? Huge sense of betrayal having bought a car you thought was environmentally sensitive but in fact the opposite is true. Worried about cost of repairs and inconvenience of not having your car.


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 1:02 pm
 br
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[i]i'd have thought that resale value/ease of resale would be an issue and compensation should cover this [/i]

They're already offering to buy them back 'at no cost', so I'm guessing they'll just offer what was paid to make it easy.

Plus of course in the USA it is quite common to fine companies/folk many times more than the cost, to make sure they don't think of doing it again.


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 1:04 pm
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ubstantial compensation to the owners? Really? How substantially have they been inconvenienced by this, other than the time taken to take their car in?

In the us there's a tendency for compensation or damages to be set at levels designed to be punitive - to punish the guilty party- rather than restorative to the 'victim'.


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 1:04 pm
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our American friends do like a good class action lawsuit!


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 1:21 pm
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jambalaya - Member

OP yes thanks for that. Yes US owners are being properly compensated and promptly while in Europe where Germany holds sway at the EU - didly F squat. The letter UK owners have says pretty much zero other than your car is affected. Frankly its outrageous

@molgrips major major pita, what if younare vw owner and wanted to sell your car, where are resale values ? Huge sense of betrayal having bought a car you thought was environmentally sensitive but in fact the opposite is true. Worried about cost of repairs and inconvenience of not having your car.

Can't say I agree, I've got an effected car - the sum total of the effect on it's resale value? somewhere between sod, and **** all.

Inconvenience of not having your car? No more than for a service (which they're proposing to do at the same time) you turn up at the dealer, sign a bit of paper and you can either have a lift to work or a Polo/Ibiza/Fabia for the day, for free.

Cost of repairs? Repairs to what? The proposed work is a remap and you don't have to have it done, no one will come around your house and dag your down the dealer at gunpoint? "Ah, but what about the resale value if you don't have it done?" Again, somewhere between sod, and **** all - because if they care, they can simply have the work completed whenever they like, for free.

Finally, the environmental argument, yes it's important - but personally when I chose mine I didn't have a clue about nitrogen emissions, I didn't even see it listed - in Europe we tend to look for the Co2 and that's unaffected by this. I'm personally dubious about these labs tests, the parameters are known and all manufacturers tailor the way their cars work to 'optimise' them for the tests - I wouldn't bet the house on VAG cars being any better or worse than any other mainstream car in the real world.

I personally am not feeling any pain from it, they've been very bad and been caught and will no doubt suffer all manor of fines that will go into the public purse, but I don't see any real hardship to owners that would require some 'compo'.


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 1:40 pm
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Frankly its outrageous

Really? Storm in a tea cup. If the fix the car for free back to original spec then what is the problem.?

having bought a car you thought was environmentally sensitive but in fact the opposite is true

"environmentally sensitive car" is a bit of an oxy-moron!

The fact that all cars that meet the original spec emit 5-10x more when driven on a road, means there is no such thing as a Green diesel.


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 2:01 pm
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P-Jay - you miss his point entirely. This isn't about convenience, cost or environmental damage. It's those damn krauts in the EU!


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 2:05 pm
 Drac
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OP yes thanks for that. Yes US owners are being properly compensated and promptly while in Europe where Germany holds sway at the EU - didly F squat. The letter UK owners have says pretty much zero other than your car is affected. Frankly its outrageous

That's because the UK government and courts haven't taken any moves yet, that's UK not EU.


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 2:13 pm
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Really? Storm in a tea cup. If the fix the car for free back to original spec then what is the problem.?

I was referring to Europe, the US has been sorted quite promptly. UK still nothing AFAIK

@Drac and why is that do you think ? Its not just the UK either, all of Europe


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 2:17 pm
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It's also because we have not (yet) become a litigation obsessed country where everybody sues everybody else over anything.

And long may that continue.


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 2:17 pm
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Proof that ligitagtion threat gets results for the consumer ? Why not just offer exactlybthe same to Europe ? My answer its far too expensive


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 2:19 pm
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Proof that ligitagtion threat gets results for the consumer

Litigation just pushes up the cost of doing business which gets passed on to the customer via higher prices and onto the staff via lower wages! The only winners are the lawyers.

But you knew that.


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 2:21 pm
 DezB
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[i]Substantial compensation to the owners? Really? How substantially have they been inconvenienced by this, other than the time taken to take their car in?[/i]

Yeah, as jambalaya says - it's all about "I bought this environmentally friendly car mmkay" Whereas, in reality VW TRICKED US into buying it!!

Never occurred to me that there would be any court case/compensation and I'm bloody glad we're not litigious enough over here.
Or will there soon be "Have I got an affected VW.com?" ads on TV...


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 2:22 pm
 Drac
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@Drac and why is that do you think ? Its not just the UK either, all of Europe

Well because we don't have such litigation hungry culture, simple really.


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 2:22 pm
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I personally am not feeling any pain from it

You are if you were even slightly swayed by the published Fuel consuption figures.

Which were fictional.


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 2:27 pm
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The deep irony of all this is that for diesels, those VW 2 litre engines are massively less polluting than most of the worn-out bus and truck diesels that belch out filthy black smoke all over the developing world.


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 2:27 pm
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Yes US owners are being properly compensated and promptly while in Europe where Germany holds sway at the EU - didly F squat.

You are aware that the US has completely different environmental legislation to the EU aren't you? Which would demand a different response?


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 2:34 pm
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ScottChegg - Member

I personally am not feeling any pain from it

You are if you were even slightly swayed by the published Fuel consuption figures.

Which were fictional.

I take them all with a pinch of salt, but mine isn't that bad - it's quoted at 56mpg and if I cruise as a constant 70 it'll do 52-53 with roof bars on, it seems to get to 60 pretty easily without them. If I'm REALLY bored and what to try my hand as 'hyper miling' if I sit behind a lorry with the cruise at 56mph it'll do 80mpg, but it takes ages to get anywhere.


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 2:37 pm
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I am. They cheated here too (see BBC Panorama documentary) but vested interests mean its all quietly quietly. You really should see the nothing letter UK owners have got.

Its not just fuel economy its emissions and to really meet the emissions the performance and fuel economy are potentially significantly affected.


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 2:38 pm
 Drac
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You really should see the nothing letter UK owners have got.

I got one to say mine isn't effected. Is this a coverup by the Germans?


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 2:44 pm
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jambalaya - Member

I am. They cheated here too (see BBC Panorama documentary) but vested interests mean its all quietly quietly. You really should see the nothing letter UK owners have got.

Its not just fuel economy its emissions and to really meet the emissions the performance and fuel economy are potentially significantly affected.

Cheated where? With the economy figures? They're independently tested, and I don't think anyone thinks they're real-world, it more of a yard stick to compare cars.

I've seen the letter, as I have a VAG diesel.

Which version have you got?


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 2:44 pm
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Anyone who claims to have bought a TDI thinking it was an environmentally sensitive option is a liar. Plan and simple.
Tdi's were purchased because of their claimed (and actual) mpg being well in excess of any USA petrol option and their driving experience unavailable in any other usa available vehicle.

Sadly (many) class action lawsuits bring money hungry Americans out of the woodwork.
Take the recent Nutella suit where claimants said they didn't realise the said chocolate spread wasn't the best choice to slap on their kids toast. Cost Nutella $3m, participants got $4 per jar (max $20)


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 2:47 pm
 Drac
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Which version have you got?

He didn't get one I reckon.

Its not just fuel economy its emissions and to really meet the emissions the performance and fuel economy are potentially significantly affected.

Part of the delay is they're making sure this isn't the case for performance. There's a letter about that.


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 2:47 pm
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Great kivk ass you yanks company,s like VAG and banks etc need to learn there are consequences and I hope to see a suite or two go to jail.


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 3:00 pm
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etc need to learn there are consequences

Normally the state (taxpayers) bail them out and the CEOs award themselves a pay rise.


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 3:03 pm
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jambalaya - Member

@molgrips major major pita, what if younare vw owner and wanted to sell your car, where are resale values ? Huge sense of betrayal having bought [u]a car you thought was environmentally sensitive[/u] but in fact the opposite is true.

Utter tripe. Anyone who bought A diesel car because they thought it was environmentally sensitive should be prevented from having any responsibility for ANYTHING or ANYONE at [u]ANY[/u] time in the future.

People bought diesel cars because they cost less to tax (thanks to government idiots) and provide marginally better fuel economy. Your motives were economic, [u][b]not[/b][/u] altruistic.


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 3:09 pm
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You really should see the nothing letter UK owners have got.

I did. I got one. It said they'll swap the naughty software for non naughty software.

If you really want to get all worked up all about it then there are plenty of ambulance-chasing legal firms who'll take your details (it's the new PPI don't you know). See the spondered adds on Google if you search for emissions + Audi/VW etc.

Anyway, I sold my 2.0TDI Audi a couple of weeks ago. Didn't seem to affect the value I got for it. Guy who bought it couldn't care less about it. Either he'll get the software updated at no cost to him or he won't bother. OH THE HUMANITY!!!


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 3:10 pm
 DezB
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[i]You really should see the nothing letter UK owners have got.[/i]

If anyone really needs to experience such a thrill here's mine (I added the sombreros to protect my car's innocence)

[URL= http://i142.photobucket.com/albums/r90/dezb99/th_C40ECF33-90B6-426E-A07F-35837E9A7902_zpsoaqg0krq.jp g" target="_blank">http://i142.photobucket.com/albums/r90/dezb99/th_C40ECF33-90B6-426E-A07F-35837E9A7902_zpsoaqg0krq.jp g"/> [/IMG][/URL]
[URL= http://i142.photobucket.com/albums/r90/dezb99/th_4C462F85-80F5-4FF2-870A-C4926964E477_zpsygq36dsa.jp g" target="_blank">http://i142.photobucket.com/albums/r90/dezb99/th_4C462F85-80F5-4FF2-870A-C4926964E477_zpsygq36dsa.jp g"/> [/IMG][/URL]

[i]Anyone who claims to have bought a TDI thinking it was an environmentally sensitive option is a liar. [/i]

I bought mine cos a mate of my brother's was selling it, took my old car in trade and it had a big boot. 🙂


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 3:11 pm
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People bought diesel cars because they cost less to tax (thanks to government idiots) and provide marginally better fuel economy.

I bought my first diesel because it had quite a bit better fuel economy (about a third more) *because* I thought that was better for the environment. And it might still be in some cases. Actually quite difficult to evaluate. I only ever used it for long trips across the countryside where there is not generally an air quality problem.


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 3:19 pm
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P-Jay - Member

I take them all with a pinch of salt, but mine isn't that bad - it's quoted at 56mpg and if I cruise as a constant 70 it'll do 52-53 with roof bars on, it seems to get to 60 pretty easily without them. If I'm REALLY bored and what to try my hand as 'hyper miling' if I sit behind a lorry with the cruise at 56mph it'll do 80mpg, but it takes ages to get anywhere.

I'd be interested to know what car that is (and what roof bars are hitting your fuel economy by that much)!

I am currently using my Wife's Ibiza FR TDi with the 140BHP 2 litre diesel engine.
Urban mpg is supposedly 48mpg.
Combined mpg is supposedly 61mpg.
Extra Urban mpg is supposedly 72mpg.

My journey is mainly a-road and in my old car (Ibiza with the 130bhp 1.9PD engine) I could easily beat the claimed combined mpg figure of 56.5mpg. That car was an 03 plate, so I'd expect a car that is 9 years newer to perform at least as well, if not significantly better.

But, I struggle to get 55mpg out of it; 52-53 is more common. My old Ibiza was a disappointment if I got less than 58mpg.

Admittedly the computer tells massive lies to make you think that you are getting decent mpg, but the reality is somewhat different. Last tank was a claimed 62.5mpg from the display, but actually measured out at 54.3mpg which was one of the best results I've had.
Pretty cak for a small car and over 10% away from the claimed mpg values.

I'm interested how VAG think they can sort out this engine. They claim they hope to do a software update (as per DezB's image) but without affecting engine output, fuel economy or performance.....which begs the question, if they can get the car to meet the targets without affecting any of those parameters, why didn't they just do that in the first place?

Unless they can prove to me that it isn't going to affect performance or economy I am not going to have it done.


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 3:37 pm
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Admittedly the computer tells massive lies

Mine doesn't. Pretty accurate. 2006 Passat.

Supposed 56mpg extra urban, I can get that on a mixed run and 63mpg on the M4, driving at 70 on cruise control.

They've improved the test results by tuning the car to do well in them (not the same as the cheat device). All manufacturers have. So if you don't drive within that part of the fuel map, you'll be further from the quoted figures. Upshot is that newer cars are far more sensitive to driving than the old ones were.

so I'd expect a car that is 9 years newer to perform at least as well

Based on.. the test results.. improvements have generally been pretty minor, especially in VW diesels (because the older ones had PD which made them much better 15 years ago than the competition). It's the test results which made us think we could get 70mpg so we expect big improvements.


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 3:42 pm
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molgrips - Member

Really? Is the car going to be worse after this?

You kind of have to assume so; if not, why would they have done the emissions defeat at all?

The UK letter suggests that VW think they can fix the issue without affecting output, economy or performance. And the obvious response is, if so, why didn't you do that in the first place?


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 3:45 pm
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stumpy01 -

I'd be interested to know what car that is (and what roof bars are hitting your fuel economy by that much)!

I am currently using my Wife's Ibiza FR TDi with the 140BHP 2 litre diesel engine.
Urban mpg is supposedly 48mpg.
Combined mpg is supposedly 61mpg.
Extra Urban mpg is supposedly 72mpg.

My journey is mainly a-road and in my old car (Ibiza with the 130bhp 1.9PD engine) I could easily beat the claimed combined mpg figure of 56.5mpg. That car was an 03 plate, so I'd expect a car that is 9 years newer to perform at least as well, if not significantly better.

But, I struggle to get 55mpg out of it; 52-53 is more common. My old Ibiza was a disappointment if I got less than 58mpg.

Admittedly the computer tells massive lies to make you think that you are getting decent mpg, but the reality is somewhat different. Last tank was a claimed 62.5mpg from the display, but actually measured out at 54.3mpg which was one of the best results I've had.
Pretty cak for a small car and over 10% away from the claimed mpg values.

I'm interested how VAG think they can sort out this engine. They claim they hope to do a software update (as per DezB's image) but without affecting engine output, fuel economy or performance.....which begs the question, if they can get the car to meet the targets without affecting any of those parameters, why didn't they just do that in the first place?

Unless they can prove to me that it isn't going to affect performance or economy I am not going to have it done.

It's an Exeo with the 2.0 CR TDi (143).

Roof bars are Thule and I've got one of each type of Thule cycle carrier on it. It looks about as aero as a milk float, but I've not nowhere to store them off the car.

[img] [/img]

You're not alone in wondering how VAG are going to achieve lower emissions without loss of performance or economy without retro fitting AdBlue or something.

I suspect they'll do the same as all the other manufacturers and simply cut the fueling in the part of the rev range they test at - there are some expensive cars being sold today with massive holes in the rev range to do this and it was one thing that sold the Exeo to me. I won't be the first in the queue to get it 'fixed',


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 4:08 pm
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molgrips - Member

Mine doesn't. Pretty accurate. 2006 Passat.

No. And neither did the one one in my old Ibiza. Well, it always over-read but by around 2-3% compared to tank to tank measurements.
What's annoying is that if they could do it when my old Ibiza came out, what have they done to the estimation method in the new Ibiza that is so shit. Why not just keep the same technique?
I reckon it's set to over-read by a certain amount. The range estimator is similarly useless - it's quite consistent down to around 65 miles & then drops like a stone. But the one in my old Ibiza was pretty good.
And, yes I know that different journies will give different results etc. but I generally do the same 80 mile commute at the same time day in, day out and it still can't estimate correctly.

P-Jay - Member

It's an Exeo with the 2.0 CR TDi (143).

That's interesting....because it's the same engine but in a larger, heavier car.
I know it's not my driving, as I've always managed to get decent mpg out of cars. I don't think I could do much more to improve the economy of the current car.
I think it might have been an ex-demo car so wonder if it had a hard life before we got it and engine wasn't treated very kindly from new??


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 8:57 pm
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I think it might have been an ex-demo car so wonder if it had a hard life before we got it and engine wasn't treated very kindly from new??

I doubt that would have any effect. Modern engines are built so well and all computer controlled that it's very hard to damage then unless you deliberately run them out of oil.


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 9:00 pm
 Drac
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Well, it always over-read but by around 2-3% compared to tank to tank measurements.

So it would show 51.5 instead of 50? Seems pretty good to me.


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 9:31 pm
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It could easily have a fault, stumpy.


 
Posted : 25/05/2016 9:32 pm
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molgrips - Member

It could easily have a fault, stumpy.

Such as....?

No warning lights, no noticeable engine issues, it's been serviced several times since we've had it and nothing reported.
We've had it since 14k miles (now on about 55k miles) & nothing has changed or worsened with regards to fuel economy; it's just not as good as I'd expect it to be.
Pretty sure if I took it to a dealer to plug it in, they'd say it's fine and then charge me £100....


 
Posted : 26/05/2016 8:01 am
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Drac - Moderator

So it would show 51.5 instead of 50? Seems pretty good to me.

You misunderstand (or perhaps I didn't word it very well).

The mpg readout in MY OLD IBIZA was always within 2-3% of actual fuel economy, which I thought was pretty good.
The mpg readout in MY WIFE's NEW IBIZA is the one that is nowhere near where it should be; hence why I said this further up the page in reference to the new car, not the old one:

Admittedly the computer tells massive lies to make you think that you are getting decent mpg, but the reality is somewhat different. Last tank was a claimed 62.5mpg from the display, but actually measured out at 54.3mpg which was one of the best results I've had.

and why I also said this:

What's annoying is that if they could do "it" [EDIT - for clarity - "it", being accurately measure the fuel economy] when my old Ibiza came out, what have they done to the estimation method in the new Ibiza that is so shit. Why not just keep the same technique?


 
Posted : 26/05/2016 8:10 am
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Such as....?

Well sensors can read out of range without throwing a fault code. There are diagnostic procedures you do to establish things like the MAF working correctly. Plus not all faults show warning lights.

If you're near Cardiff or Swindon I can take a look if you like. And you might be right about the dealers, but dealers (necessarily) are mainly interested in making money rather than fixing your car. So tend not to spend that long on it unless you pay them.

it's just not as good as I'd expect it to be

Well if your expectations are driven by the improvement in the published stats, then they're unrealistic. You can get better economy if you drive in the right region of the map, but there's no way of knowing what that is, and if your driving style falls outside of that you'll never know. Just read any car forum about economy and you'll see some people saying 'oh I can achieve the test figures whilst still driving the speed limit' and others who say it's impossible and they only get 2/3 of the test figures.


 
Posted : 26/05/2016 8:12 am
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[quote="stumpy01"]it's just not as good as I'd expect it to be.You'll possibly find that your old car was tested to a different test cycle when the consumption was homologated, or they'll have changed the rules as to how the car was set up. So in the new car, even though you are doing the same drive, you are further away from the test cycle. So your fuel consumption differs by more than the old car.
Or it may be down to different gear ratios, different pedal map etc etc. All affect fuel consumption and how it varies compared to the quoted figures.

I'm still interested to see what the new software for VAG cars ends up with, higher emissions figures, almost identical power, torque and fuel consumption, or same/similar emissions and a degradation across the board in power, torque and fuel consumption


 
Posted : 26/05/2016 8:15 am
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@stumpy gearing and aerodynamics play their part, my car has a LOOOOOONG 6th gear, so long at at 70 going up a hill on the motorway (of which there are a lot here in Wales) the gear change light wants 5th and it can loose speed, it makes it feel a little underpowered sometimes, when it really isn't.

Also, despite it's size it's very low - the roof life is noticeably lower than say a Golf which Ibiza sized, that might explain why it falls off so much with the bars on.


 
Posted : 26/05/2016 10:12 am
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Anyone who claims to have bought a TDI thinking it was an environmentally sensitive option is a liar.

That's certainly one of the main things the salepeople push. I bought a 2.7TDI in 2007 and they where certainly pushing that (not an engine size impacted), my puchase decision was based on economy and also price as the equivalent petrol engine version was much more expensive.


 
Posted : 26/05/2016 10:19 am
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That's certainly one of the main things the salepeople push.

Quite possibly, but there has been so much info in the news about the damage diesel particulates (esp PM10) do to people, that you'd almost have to be wilfully ignorant to believe a Diesel engine isn't bad for the environment.


 
Posted : 26/05/2016 11:06 am
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P-Jay - Member

@stumpy gearing and aerodynamics play their part, my car has a LOOOOOONG 6th gear, so long at at 70 going up a hill on the motorway (of which there are a lot here in Wales) the gear change light wants 5th and it can loose speed, it makes it feel a little underpowered sometimes, when it really isn't.

Also, despite it's size it's very low - the roof life is noticeably lower than say a Golf which Ibiza sized, that might explain why it falls off so much with the bars on.

Yeah. True. 6th is pretty long on mine. Can't remember exactly, but it's revving at around 1800 in 6th, although can't remember wanting/needing to ever change down on motorway hills.
That gear change indicator is another stupid idea if it's the same as in mine. It supposedly indicated the most economical gear to be in, but has no idea if you are going up hill etc. If you follow it in my car, the engine is labouring on anything but perfectly flat stretches of road & you can forget attempting to accelerate while in that gear.

Not sure on the exact height, but my car doesn't look any higher than the Exeo estate it's parked next to in the car park today.
Mine isn't based on the Golf; it's the smaller Polo chassis & what with it being the 3dr coupe it's really quite small.....


 
Posted : 26/05/2016 12:23 pm
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Yeah. True. 6th is pretty long on mine. Can't remember exactly, but it's revving at around 1800 in 6th, although can't remember wanting/needing to ever change down on motorway hills.
That gear change indicator is another stupid idea if it's the same as in mine. It supposedly indicated the most economical gear to be in, but has no idea if you are going up hill etc. If you follow it in my car, the engine is labouring on anything but perfectly flat stretches of road & you can forget attempting to accelerate while in that gear.

Not sure on the exact height, but my car doesn't look any higher than the Exeo estate it's parked next to in the car park today.
Mine isn't based on the Golf; it's the smaller Polo chassis & what with it being the 3dr coupe it's really quite small..

Yeah the gear indicator is daft, I'm sure it's some kind of way to reduce the emissions on paper.


 
Posted : 26/05/2016 1:11 pm
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Not entirely useless. My mate's recently got his first diesel after 20 years of petrol, and drives around at over 2krpm all over the place because otherwise it 'feels wrong'. He needs to pay attention to the gear change indicator.


 
Posted : 26/05/2016 1:14 pm
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molgrips - Member

Not entirely useless. My mate's recently got his first diesel after 20 years of petrol, and drives around at over 2krpm all over the place because otherwise it 'feels wrong'. He needs to pay attention to the gear change indicator.

I didn't say they were universally useless, but the one in the Ibiza makes the car virtually undriveable....telling you to change gear so far down the rev range that the engine labours when you make the change; you can just about maintain speed if you are on the flat, but put your foot down & there is almost no acceleration at all & forget about maintaining speed up even the slightest of inclines.


 
Posted : 26/05/2016 1:45 pm
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@footflaps I agree with you, this is partly a result of owning one.

As per the comments above I would enforce the fixes and make VW pay owners compensation for loss of performance/fuel economy/vehicle value


 
Posted : 26/05/2016 1:52 pm
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Quite possibly, but there has been so much info in the news about the damage diesel particulates (esp PM10) do to people, that you'd almost have to be wilfully ignorant to believe a Diesel engine isn't bad for the environment.

I think you're getting yourself confused here.

EGR's were first introduced to lower emissions of nitrogen oxides via lower combustion temperatures.

As a result of lower combustion temperatures there was an increase in the amount of particulates owing to incomplete combustion. Hence, DPF's were introduced. Where EGR's and DPF's weren't pratical adblue was the weapon of choice.

So a diesel [i]shouldn't[/i] be emitting particulates provided it has its DPF intact (or is running lean enough to get complete combustion). Now we get to Volkswagen, presumably the frigged maps made the engines run rich at the proscribed [b]nitrogen oxide[/b] test point but the rest of the time it ran lean thus decreasing fuel consumption (shock horror engines run more efficiently with full combustion) and lower CO2 emissions (again, through better fuel efficiency). That's presumably how they roughly managed to get the cars to do what they do.

On nitrogen oxides and particulates - these are only really a problem where they aren't dispersed sufficiently such as in heavily built up areas (cities) and places that have little in the way of air movement (California being the gold standard). The result is, of course, smog, something you don't get in the countryside which brings us back to the "all diesels are evil" argument. They're not, if used in the right places (not that we should be using that as an excuse not to develop better solutions) as it's not as simple as people like to believe.


 
Posted : 26/05/2016 2:08 pm
 Drac
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The mpg readout in MY OLD IBIZA was always within 2-3% of actual fuel economy, which I thought was pretty good.
The mpg readout in MY WIFE's NEW IBIZA is the one that is nowhere near where it should be; hence why I said this further up the page in reference to the new car, not the old one

Oh right! Sorry that was me reading it wrong. 😳


 
Posted : 26/05/2016 2:12 pm
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AFAIK the gear shift indicator is a legal requirement these days.


 
Posted : 27/05/2016 7:14 am
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So a diesel shouldn't be emitting particulates provided it has its DPF intact (or is running lean enough to get complete combustion).

I very much doubt the DPF removes all particulate all the time. I can believe it substantially reduces them when running under optimum conditions.


 
Posted : 27/05/2016 6:05 pm
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I very much doubt the DPF removes all particulate all the time.

Why? It's not an on/off thing, it's constantly in use saving the times it's on regen (when the engine runs extra lean to burn everything out).


 
Posted : 27/05/2016 11:02 pm
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Interesting report out today, Diesel's days may be numbered.....

“London’s air is both lethal and illegal,” said Harry Quilter-Pinner, researcher at IPPR. “This is a public health crisis and it should be ignored no longer. Only bold action will make the capital’s air safe to breathe again.”

He added: “[Our] analysis suggests Khan will ultimately need to phase out diesel cars and buses in order to reach legal compliance.”

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2016/jul/18/ban-diesel-cars-in-london-thinktank-urges


 
Posted : 18/07/2016 6:25 pm
 DezB
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They're ready -
[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 14/09/2016 11:19 am
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Best of luck, keep us posted


 
Posted : 14/09/2016 11:31 am
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@DezB are you planning to go ahead with it?

I'm interested to know what the downside is, on the face of it:

Reduced Emissions
No AdBlue system.
Same "Maximum" Torque
Same Economy
Same Performance figures...

It doesn't add up to me, I'm guess it's either going to have a rev range full of holes, or it's going to flat as a pancake unless you're tearing the arse out of it.


 
Posted : 14/09/2016 11:40 am
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Some interesting wording there. So the published data will remain unchanged - what about the actual values?

As above, I don't see why they bothered in the first place if the fix leaves the car just as good as before.


 
Posted : 14/09/2016 11:44 am
 DezB
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Yep - here's the other side of the letter:
[img] [/img]

Don't see why you wouldn't go ahead with it.


 
Posted : 14/09/2016 11:44 am
 DezB
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"Advances in diesel combustion technology which were not available at the time your vehicle was manufactured" of course 😆


 
Posted : 14/09/2016 11:45 am
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Of course I would trust a letter from a car manufacturer who lied about the cars emissions not to lie again about the fix not effecting any other performance specifics of the car 😯


 
Posted : 14/09/2016 11:53 am
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Dez thanks, forwarded to a mate with an Audi with that motor.

@craig obviously the defeat device can be removed without impacting day to day performance, the question is with the device removed would the car pass the emissions test ? If not then its hard to see how the mods would not affect performance in some way.

This whole espisode US vs EU handling shows how European governments run scared of the EU whilst the manufacturers are sh.t scared of what the US can do. A software update and no compensation / buyback ahows how lame / in the pocket of France and Germany is the EU


 
Posted : 14/09/2016 12:01 pm
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I have an Audi with the 2.0 TDI engine and I'm not letting those ****ers anywhere near it because experience suggests that Audi dealers are about as trustworthy as the VW mothership. The letter is going in the recycling, I'll see what the specialist independent garage I use says next time it's due a service.


 
Posted : 14/09/2016 12:12 pm
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Don't see why you wouldn't go ahead with it.

I'm going to say "trust issues" would be a decent reason.

As I understand it, and I'd like to be corrected on this, emission gases on lean burn diesels are a set thing - you burn 1ltr of Diesel and get x amount of Nitrogen. You can reduce it a lot by using Adblue, but without that, it's a set ratio of fuel to NOx.

So to reduce the NOx without it you need to make the engine burn less fuel, but they say the economy remains unchanged

So it'll be just another case of horse trading, they'll they poke big holes in the rev range at the testing speeds, or just make it flatter over-all, unless you really give it some, over and above the test range and it'll be full power again.

Real world emission change, Zero. But it won't be as nice to drive, it won't pull as cleanly and it'll feel flat unless you're driving like a loon.

That's only my guess, they could of course explain it all in detail to consumers if they won't it, not just in vague terms which don't mean much, even letting the 'motoring press' know so they can disseminate it to the rest of it.

Personally I'll wait for a lot of other people to do it first to see what it's like - but ultimately probably won't do it as I'm changing soon, I'll probably have another VAG, but it'll be a petrol.


 
Posted : 14/09/2016 12:13 pm
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A friend has had there 2.0 TDI Golf 'fixed' and she says it feels slower, particularly at lower revs. She only got it done as wants to sell it and is under the impression that she needed to.

I'll be leaving mine for a while.


 
Posted : 14/09/2016 12:16 pm
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obviously the defeat device can be removed without impacting day to day performance, the question is with the device removed would the car pass the emissions test ?

The defeat device was an alternative map that the engine management system used when it detected the car was being emissions tested in the USA.

The EPA have been on VW's case for several years because when the engines were being tested the emissions were incredibly low so they comissioned a number of real world driving tests to measure the actual emissions which is how VW were found out. The USA's diesel emission levels are lower than Europe's so the cars may/may not pass over here (if anyone cares) but not in the USA hence the compensation schemes. If the schemes were applied across Europe and worldwide it would be the end of VAG.


 
Posted : 14/09/2016 12:18 pm
 DezB
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[i]Of course I would trust a letter from a car manufacturer who lied about the cars emissions not to lie again about the fix not effecting any other performance specifics of the car[/i]

Letter is from Driver & Vehicle Standards Agency.

It's just a car. I don't use it enough to worry about a minor performance effect. Only thing I'm bothered about is the price of VED. It's getting done for nothing, they're collecting and delivering it back.


 
Posted : 14/09/2016 12:27 pm
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I cant help but side with the suspicous ones on this matter.

What new technology has been developed to improve things? If that is the case then it doesnt mention anything other than software update from what i read? So its a remap.

This reminds me of the Fiat 500 situation where they launched the 1.2 engine in euro 6 guise. The engine mapping was full of flat spots. You hadto rev the engine so hard to do hill starts they got the stig from Top Gear to try to get one up a hill and he struggled. It was a complete dud but at least they werent trying to do it in a backhand way, they just couldnt sell the things to people that knew how to drive.

There are loads of cars on the roads with flat spots in their existing mapping which is how every other manufacturer has managed to reach required levels without the aid of adblue. The accept that its a characteristic of the vehicles now.

Its just another attempt by VW group to hide the truth. If i had a car effected i would want a guarentee that it doesnt alter the driveability of the car in any way before going ahead.


 
Posted : 14/09/2016 12:33 pm
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so DezB are you actually letting VAG fiddle with your ECU map?

I have the same letter, and just dont see any reason to allow VW hobble my engine. At the very least Im leaving it 12m until there's plenty of evidence out there to say that power curves, mpg, CO2 etc are unaffected. But I dont hold out much hope for that.


 
Posted : 21/09/2016 7:51 am
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What new technology has been developed to improve things?

It's not new technology, it's a different map. I'd imagine your car will just end up in a different emissions category IF they have the facility to recategorise it. Or maybe they've just come up with a better map in the first place.


 
Posted : 21/09/2016 7:54 am
 DezB
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VW has been fiddled with, cleaned and returned to me.
Compensation!? Compensation indeed... there was a box on my seat

[img] [/img]

😆


 
Posted : 22/09/2016 1:40 pm
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