Skip to main content

VW’s Diesel Fix has European Customers Wishing They Hadn’t Bothered

Volkswagen’s U.S. diesel woes have consumed most of the oxygen in the room for the past year and a half, but Europe has its own issues with the automaker’s powerplants.

While European owners haven’t had to hand their vehicle over in exchange for cash, the region’s less-stringent environmental laws still require that VW offer a fix for its rigged diesel engines. Good news for air quality, but bad news — apparently — for drivers. Many owners have discovered the fix turns a perfectly fine (though illegal) vehicle into a nightmare.

According to UK’s The Guardian, complaints are pouring in over the newly compliant 1.6 and 2.0-liter diesel four-cylinders.

A total of 1.2 million VW, Skoda and Seat vehicles are currently under recall, of which half a million have seen a fix. Some just require a software upgrade, which happens to be the only available fix for certain newer-model U.S. vehicles, but a more in-depth fix for other vehicles has proved to be a problem. The U.S. hasn’t approved a full-scale fix for older affected vehicles, but it remains on the option list for VW owners facing a buyback.

2015 model year vehicles equipped with the 2.0-liter diesel will ultimately see the installation of a diesel particulate filter, diesel oxidation catalyst and NOx catalyst, in addition to the software tweaks. In Europe, however, a “flow transformer” mesh insert installed in the air intake allows the car’s computer to gain a more accurate reading of incoming oxygen.

The newspaper claims the alterations performed on 1.6-liter engines have turned vehicles into “a shadow of their former selves.” Some of the gripes stem from the fact that the recall’s voluntary nature wasn’t known to some owners, or that the fix was performed during routine servicing.

One Guardian reader, James Harrison, said his 2010 Golf 1.6 “has begun to stall intermittently, and is difficult to restart.” The vehicle now goes into regeneration mode — a process where the particulate trapped by the filter is burned off at high temperatures — every day, rather than a few times a year, he claims.

“If the car is regenerating every day, what will this do to the lifespan of the EGR [exhaust gas recirculation] valve and the rest of the exhaust system, which cost thousands to fix if they go wrong?” Harrison wrote, adding that the fix has “ruined” his car.

Volkswagen admits there are some complaints about the fix, but denies that it’s a widespread issue.

Last fall, the British automotive website Honest John detailed some of the complaints that began rolling in regarding 2.0-liter Tiguans. Fixed vehicles often exhibit a decrease in low-end torque, accompanied by an annoying rattle, the publication said. One owner said a VW mechanic confirmed their 2012 Tiguan lacked power between 1,000 and 2,000 rpm. Another claimed their 2012 2.0-liter Passat wagon was a “sluggish, underpowered donkey.” Another poster’s fuel economy dropped by up to 10 percent.

One Honest John poster, claiming to be a former VW mechanic, advised readers to have a specialist reverse their vehicle’s engine fix.

All of this seems like another headache in waiting for Volkswagen of America. While Volkswagen claims the approved fix for newer 2.0-liter engines will “not affect vehicle fuel economy, reliability, or durability,” Europe’s woes should make the automaker wary of repairing older models. So far, the buyback has proved very popular in the States. If the EPA fails to approve an older engine fix, it might not be a loss to either VW or owners.

This  article first appeared on thetruthaboutcars.com

The post VW’s Diesel Fix has European Customers Wishing They Hadn’t Bothered appeared first on VWVortex.



from VWVortex http://ift.tt/2o2jCaM
via IFTTT

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Review: Saying Goodbye to the CC V6

For all its size and its global reach, Volkswagen is still, in many ways, a deeply human company. There was, for instance, the Bugatti Veyron an ego project if ever there was one. Then the purchase of Ducati, a move most called folly. And then there was the Phaeton, the Volkswagen that most folks can’t afford. Not only were these moves all strange, I’m sure that they made VW’s accountants furious. None of them made good business sense, but they were all deeply interesting and they all are evidence of the heart that beats at the center of VW. Among these follies is the CC, a car that everyone agrees is rakishly handsome, but that no one really wanted to buy. The car couldn’t last, but the world is brighter for its having been in it. With the approach debut of the Arteon, it seems like a good time to look back on its sadly departing predecessor. The version I drove, because I live in Canada, is a V6 Wolfsburg Edition, which apparently isn’t available in the States. Nor is the V6, not as...

Mitsubishi admits it lied about MPG ratings for all vehicles in Japan

Filed under: Government/Legal , Green , Mitsubishi , Fuel Efficiency , Japan Mitsubishi says its shady fuel-economy test practices may have been used on all vehicles it sells and has sold in Japan. Continue reading Mitsubishi admits it lied about MPG ratings for all vehicles in Japan Mitsubishi admits it lied about MPG ratings for all vehicles in Japan originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 11 May 2016 12:36:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink  |  Email this  |  Comments from Autoblog Volkswagen http://ift.tt/21X3bHv

More 3.0-Liter TDI Settlement Details Expected by January 31

Volkswagen and the TDI Plaintiff’s Steering Committee were in court today for another status conference following the agreement in principal reached earlier this week. Little new information was given at the conference held before Judge Charles Breyer today, but the court ordered the parties to develop a formal settlement agreement, class action notices, and a class notice plan by January 31, 2017. For now, though, owners still don’t know how much to expect in compensation. Elizabeth Cabraser, lead Counsel for the Plaintiff’s Steering Committee reaffirmed in a statement today that the compensation would be “substantial.” The potential cost to Volkswagen is widely reported to exceed $1 billion, though, with an additional $225 million going into an environmental trust to help offset excess emissions. Buy back offers are still only expected for the oldest 20,000 of the roughly 80,000 VW Group vehicles sold in America with the 3.0-liter TDI engine. Those vehicles are mostly SUVs, like ...