I think I am inside ,5 year window. It's closeThat’s for original purchasers. I think the fallback on resale vehicles is 5/60 unless it’s a CPO car.
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I think I am inside ,5 year window. It's closeThat’s for original purchasers. I think the fallback on resale vehicles is 5/60 unless it’s a CPO car.
Agreed.I’ve come to the conclusion that aside from the gas cap and windshield wipers, no car part is easily accessible.
In my early 20's I had a series of $500 cars.I once lived in a house, a notorious student dwelling, in Chapel Hill where there was a "house car." I never used it because I had my own but most of the time two or three of the folks living there would go in on a car, pay around $500 and drive it until it broke. There were a couple in the driveway because that's where they gave up the ghost. A couple more died in other places. They'd figure out how to orchestrate the legalities, at least to some passable level, and just carry on. That was in the late 1980s/early '90s.
Twice the fun for twice the price.In my early 20's I had a series of $500 cars.
One leaked power steering fluid so bad I designed a reservoir to feed in fluid.
I agree with much that you say. And I bet that you are far more dilligent and knowledgable about the virtues and necessity of regular maintenance than about 99% of the population. But when I first talked to that guy in the independent repair shop and he guessed the model and year of my car just from the symptoms I described, that gave him a lot of credibility with me.My experience with Mercedes is the opposite. Between my wife and I, we have had six MBs over the past 30 years. I’ve never had any significant issues and just took them in once a year for routine maintenance. I currently drive a 2017 GLC “coupe” which I ordered new spec’ed out exactly as I wanted it. I’ve driven it for 9 years, put 65,000 miles on it and I’ve done the routine annual maintenance, put tires and brakes on it, and that’s it.
I worked for automotive suppliers for years, and called on most of the auto manufacturers and have a pretty good idea of the quality different OEMs demand from their supplier base and how well they manufacture their product. I also spent a good amount of time on the aftermarket side of the business dealing with independent repair shops. While many of those guys truly know their shit and I would absolutely trust them to fix my car, I don’t believe a word they say about the inner workings and decision-making of OEMs. These guys have more conspiracy theories about the motives of OEMs than QAnon has about the deep state.
The second opinion mechanic drove your car 150 miles?I took my 2021 Pilot to the dealer a few weeks ago because I was getting a weird combination of seemingly unrelated codes/errors including transmission, emissions, and blind spot error. Intermittently I couldn't put it in gear due to the error. The car had been left in auxiliary power a couple of days prior so I figured it might have caused a computer glitch or maybe the errors were from a drained battery. After checking the car, the dealership service tech messaged me that based on the codes, the transmission failed and replacement would be $8,000.00!!! I told them that made no sense since it was clearly drivable, had no previous transmission issues and only had 70,000 miles with up to date routine maintenance.
I took it elsewhere for a second opinion. After the second opinion mechanic drove it for 150 miles, he agreed with me that it was just a glitch from the auxiliary power drain. They completed the routine service, saved me over $7,000, and I've had no issues since.
My off campus roommate in college worked for Performance BMW. He said the entire business model was to screw over everybody, but we all know this.
Thankfully I haven't ever stepped foot in one.
Twice the fun for twice the price.
Like in Ferris Bueller's day off and the Ferrari.The second opinion mechanic drove your car 150 miles?
My Accura had a similar issue once. I read online and most things seemed to indicate that the trans had failed. I took it to a transmission shop, it was a blown fuse.I took my 2021 Pilot to the dealer a few weeks ago because I was getting a weird combination of seemingly unrelated codes/errors including transmission, emissions, and blind spot error. Intermittently I couldn't put it in gear due to the error. The car had been left in auxiliary power a couple of days prior so I figured it might have caused a computer glitch or maybe the errors were from a drained battery. After checking the car, the dealership service tech messaged me that based on the codes, the transmission failed and replacement would be $8,000.00!!! I told them that made no sense since it was clearly drivable, had no previous transmission issues and only had 70,000 miles with up to date routine maintenance.
I took it elsewhere for a second opinion. After the second opinion mechanic drove it for 150 miles, he agreed with me that it was just a glitch from the auxiliary power drain. They completed the routine service, saved me over $7,000, and I've had no issues since.
You did but you worked for your money, too. There's some time and effort there. Knowing what you're doing and not buying it to ride takes some of the adventure out of it.I purchased a '75 LTD for a hundred bucks once, because I wanted the engine. I thought it had a 351 Windsor, turned out it had a 351 Cleveland 4 bolt main. I sold the engine and transmission for $500, the front bench seat for $50, and found $28 in change all around the car. After that I sold the body for scrap and got another $70 after the towing fee.
Made out pretty well on that one.
I've purchased a lot of parts cars and stripped them.
Same with a rear crankshaft seal, $2 part, $1000 labor.Another masterpiece of design:
2014 Ram 1500 V6 Turbo Diesel - The engine came from Italy. A common failure is the crank position sensor. It costs $50 and is basically a thin magnet glued to a piece of metal. If it fails, the engine shuts down pretty much wherever you are. To replace it, they have to drop the transmission to get to the flywheel. $50 part, $2200 labor.
LOL. He lives about 40 miles from the shop and drove it home overnight and back and then around town the next day.The second opinion mechanic drove your car 150 miles?