I can't wait until the EU uses safety as the excuse to regulate and fix this "screen for everything" shit.
Not sure when that's supposed to be finalized but it can't be soon enough.
Annoyed that my Volvo has most HVAC thru the screen (although it doesn't require much intervention and has voice controls that work well enough for people who are into that sort of thing), but happy 90% of the audio is physical buttons.
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Yea, I'm with you, as I think many of us here are. My 2017 i3 was great, but having to take it to the dealer one time ended my desire to have anything I couldn't work on. That said, I still have some hope that the rumored 2025 MR2 is going to happen gives me hope that *maybe* I will buy a new car for once in my life. We'll see...
I did go and check out a Corolla GR not too long ago, but the dealer mark-up and the complexity of AWD + turbo3 killed the thought of the 'one-car to do it all' dream.
At this point, the 996 with its drive by cable, no traction control and ~300+ bhp seems to be the best option for my "new-fast car". The TDI is the current placeholder for sh!tbox daily (see how long that lasts) and finally I have hopes that theres a 3rd car in there somewhere.
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My Jetta is a 2014, so looks like I'm good. My Mom's 2021 GLI not so much. Guess we'll see if it becomes an issue.
I think I've pretty much decided I'm done with new cars. My Jetta has been pretty solid, but the few things that it's needed have been a pain in the ass. Even something as simple as a headlight bulb is a pain in the ass to change. And everything is plastic. I think even the oil pans on the new VWs are plastic now. And plastic is of course known for its durability and longevity, right? I'm sure this will end well.
I don't know what I'll get when the Jetta needs to be replaced. Maybe something from the late 90s or early 2000s, but by that point cars had quite a bit of plastic in them, so I'm not sure that'd be such a good idea. I'm tempted to just get a bulletproof older MB, like a W114 or W123, but the diesels are insanely slow, and the gas engines get horrible fuel economy and aren't much faster.
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So VWs Audis and yes, Porsches with the 1.8T or 2.0T utilized this style of water pump after 2015
The past generation of TFSI engines from VW are actually.... *sighs* not bad engines. It uses the same belt driven water pump under the intake. Uses a tradition thermostat. This new one is stupid as fuck.
The cooling system is terrible on theses new turbo 4s from VAG. Hard plastic lines everywhere.. We all know what happens to those after so many heat cycles.
Were in an era of the gay version of HP wars..
Everyone is chasing that high MPG number while trying to pump up their HP numbers... That's why everything is turbo-ed
The new Mercedes cars that end with 300 use their new turbo 4 that uses air to water intercoolers... the intercooler is right in front of the drive belt, also a totally separate cooling system, so you got two pumps, two tanks ect ect
We're fucked
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Originally posted by 2mAn View Postand this is exactly why they are all going this way...
Matt Farah talked about this most recently on one of his Bentley (or was it a Roller) review. Basically when you get the ultra rich level all the analog controls come back.
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Originally posted by Panici View PostAs a side note, it's amazing how cheap electronic displays are compared to robust analog gauges.
Matt Farah talked about this most recently on one of his Bentley (or was it a Roller) review. Basically when you get the ultra rich level all the analog controls come back.
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Originally posted by Chilezen View PostWell can't we just.. only spend money on the good brands? The ones that still work long term?
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Originally posted by varg View PostEnthusiasts are such a small sliver of the buying public and a majority of car buyers do next to no research before buying new cars, I don't think there's any possible avenue we could take that would affect positive changes like making people want to get rid of electronic parking brakes, ridiculous electromechanical thermostats, bizarre engineering decisions like putting TTY hardware on wheel spindles. And then there's the ones that are present everywhere like actuators of all sorts having weak plastic gears and functional controls and gauges being replaced with touchscreens. The manufacturers love that last one, the screens. It's so incredibly cost advantageous to replace the cluster and controls with a screen and the general public (dumb) eats it up because it's "modern". Mr general public, when you see that gauge cluster and set of controls get replaced by a screen in your new luxury car, that wasn't a luxurious modern feature, that set of screens and mounts cost the manufacturer a fraction of what making a nice looking and reliable gauge cluster and set of physical controls would have cost them. They're laughing their way to the bank with that one.
As a side note, it's amazing how cheap electronic displays are compared to robust analog gauges.
I bought an entire Windows 10 tablet to run Tunerstudio for less then the cost of 2 analog VDO gauges.
Not only can I display everything from my standalone ecu, but also tune without needing a laptop.
The key point here is that I have full control of what is displayed, and I can (and often do) leave the tablet stored and run without it leaving me with the OEM gauges only. I HATE modern car screens that can't be turned off (or at least down to a very minimum brightness for night use)
It also looks like absolute shit in a modern classic interior, but I deemed it acceptable for my rough-around-the-edges Miata.
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Enthusiasts are such a small sliver of the buying public and a majority of car buyers do next to no research before buying new cars, I don't think there's any possible avenue we could take that would affect positive changes like making people want to get rid of electronic parking brakes, ridiculous electromechanical thermostats, bizarre engineering decisions like putting TTY hardware on wheel spindles. And then there's the ones that are present everywhere like actuators of all sorts having weak plastic gears and functional controls and gauges being replaced with touchscreens. The manufacturers love that last one, the screens. It's so incredibly cost advantageous to replace the cluster and controls with a screen and the general public (dumb) eats it up because it's "modern". Mr general public, when you see that gauge cluster and set of controls get replaced by a screen in your new luxury car, that wasn't a luxurious modern feature, that set of screens and mounts cost the manufacturer a fraction of what making a nice looking and reliable gauge cluster and set of physical controls would have cost them. They're laughing their way to the bank with that one.
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Well can't we just.. only spend money on the good brands? The ones that still work long term?
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If only enthusiasts could rapidly pass on information to more general consumers about why these systems are bad and will cost them (and us in other ways) long term so that they wouldn't buy that product from day one.
Frankly, we are making our hobby more expensive, and how dare we.
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Originally posted by roguetoaster View PostI have yet to see a single component design on any VAG product where I thought "nice," or "clever," or "well thought out." Generally it's only WTF were they thinking.
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What year A3 and when did they start using those thermostats?
Seeing failures like that only reinforces my distaste for new cars.
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For real lol
Her car may have caught on fire if she didn't bring it in when she did.. 40k miles *insert skull emoji*
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