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Diesels in the News

8143 messages,  Last post on Nov 27, 2009 at 12:10 PM

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#6993 of 8143
Lone Ranger by loneranger2
Oct 04, 2008 (11:06 pm)
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Sorry All, I forgot to mention that you can research and lookup both the Isuzu D-Max and the Turbo Diesel Ford Ranger. Isuzu D-Max, Thailand 2008 OR FORD/MAZDA Ranger, Thailand, 2008
#6994 of 8143
Re: The Lone Ranger 2008 [loneranger2] by gagrice
Oct 05, 2008 (7:08 am)
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Replying to: loneranger2 (Oct 04, 2008 10:56 pm)

The Ford Ranger diesels brought me to Edmund's in 1998. I have wanted one for 10 years now. I have a POC Ford Ranger V6 gasser that is lucky to get 15 MPG. Gas engines are as far as I am concerned useless for any serious use. I will NEVER buy another new gas engine vehicle.
#6995 of 8143
Re: The Lone Ranger 2008 [loneranger2] by ruking1
Oct 05, 2008 (9:30 am)
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Replying to: loneranger2 (Oct 04, 2008 10:56 pm)

Given the graphic and 700 BILLION dollar BAIL OUT; it would seem 3rd world countries are not losing many advantages over US! Indeed there is at least a world wide spill over. I am guessing you probably pay far less property taxes in Belize vs say Chappaqua, NY. (upstate) .
 
Here is a European take.
Europeans scramble to save failing banks
 
I would take it by your post that instead of superficial yearly design changes, i.e., new sheet metal EVERY year, they stay longer with what works and hopefully do incremental improvements in a model's generation.
 
Getting the so called "best OF" in car buying is almost like buying a computer or a sleep mattress. There are way too many "useless"choices (my .02 cent editorial). It also makes "thoughtful comparisons" almost meaningless. This of course leads to when it breaks...throw it away.
 
More to the diesel point, what are the oem recommendations for oil and fuel filter changes?
 
On a 2003 VW Jetta TDI I am running 20-25,000 miles OCI's. and 60,000 miles fuel filter changes. I have done a TB/WP change. NON diesel related, and just recently 109,000 miles I had to change a thermostat and coolant sensor. Coolant is life time, so all that was done was top up what was lost in the process of repairs.
#6996 of 8143
Re: Goodbye VW TDi PD ? [ruking1] by alltorque
Oct 05, 2008 (11:31 am)
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Replying to: ruking1 (Oct 04, 2008 7:30 pm)

My experience, and of those I know, is that the VW-group TDi's are a long lived breed. My personal experience is a 3 year old Skoda Fabia 1.9 TDi PD/130bhp. In 3 years 45k miles it had only servicing needed, engine-wise. rest of car was nearly as good. It needed a new fuel filler cap clip at 11k miles, replaced under warranty in 15 minutes and that was it. Neighbour runs an Audi A8 3.0 TDi PD. 80k miles in 3 years and just routine servicing. 4 ex-colleagues run Audi or Vw TSi's and report nil problems over up to 4 years to date and none expected. Local taxi guy had a Skoda Octavia, (Golf with a bigger body), with the 1.9 TDi/105bhp. After 4 years and 410k miles he bought a new one and gave the old one to his wife as her daily driver. In all those miles he had only rotine servicing plus replacement tyres, 1 x clutch and cambelt changed as per recommended intervals. No failures at all. Those seem to be pretty much the norm and provided they are maintained properly the TDi's seem bullet proof. No real evidence on Japanese other than my wife's Jazz - 2 years old and nil problems and one of her friends 10 year old Civic.........rust spot on one wheel arch, (stone chip probably), but no other faults. Both are gassers.
 
German vs Japanese ? Hard to call. Lexus, Honda, Toyota, Mazda generally top owner surveys but Skoda now fugure in top 3. German or Japanese vs French ? No contest.............don't buy French unless you live near a dealer and enjoy sitting in reception waiting for them to fix the electrics. Actual engines seem just as bullet-proof, though.
 
Sorry it's a bit less than clear cut. Japanese cars in general are considered excellent, Honda best of mainstream and Lexus top - if you have the money. Skoda rated best-built of VW-group but Audi is the prestige brand in the group in same way that Lexus equates to Toyota. Overall, engine problems seem to be very low level in all makes and none of the diesels is a noted troublemaker. VW TDi's rated as best but Honda CTDi's are up there with 'em.
 
Does that help ?
#6997 of 8143
Re: Goodbye VW TDi PD ? [alltorque] by ruking1
Oct 05, 2008 (5:46 pm)
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Replying to: alltorque (Oct 05, 2008 11:31 am)

Yes it does. Not that I intend to put you in a position to speak for all Europeans....
 
Also for me it tends to confirm the experiences I am having (on this side of the pond) with the VW TDI 1.9. I would even hazard a guess that the VW TDI 2.0 C/R common rail is a significant improvement over an already bullet proof engine. I also realize this opinion (over here) might be an extreme minority opinion. However in that sense I have been and remain in a cocoon of sorts in a perfect storm.
 
As a side by side comparison, I am also satified with the Honda Civic (gasser) like miles. There are a few nits, some major and most minor: but really they can be put in the whiners bin. I do wish however the Civic gasser was a cTDI !!!
#6998 of 8143
The People's Diesel by moparbad
Oct 06, 2008 (2:55 pm)
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Jetta TDI
#6999 of 8143
Re: The People's Diesel [moparbad] by ruking1
Oct 06, 2008 (3:12 pm)
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Replying to: moparbad (Oct 06, 2008 2:55 pm)

I hope for their sake, they have made more of the VW Jetta in this case (non diesel portions) as bulletproof as the DIESEL portion.
#7000 of 8143
BIG diesel mistake..... by ruking1
Oct 06, 2008 (4:27 pm)
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BUT in a good way. (But then it is what we have been saying all along)
 
Jetta TDI proving more popular than VW planned
Posted Oct 3rd 2008 at 5:03PM by Jeremy Korzeniewski
 
link title
#7001 of 8143
Re: BIG diesel mistake..... [ruking1] by gagrice
Oct 06, 2008 (4:44 pm)
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Replying to: ruking1 (Oct 06, 2008 4:27 pm)

with nearly a third of sedan buyers and half of all wagon buyers opting for the oil-burner.
 
That seems a bit low to me. Why would anyone buy the gas version if they tried the TDI. Makes no sense. The tax credit will take up the difference in cost. And the resale will be way more when they are ready to trade in. The Jetta TDI is a NO COST option.
#7002 of 8143
Re: BIG diesel mistake..... [gagrice] by ruking1
Oct 06, 2008 (4:57 pm)
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Replying to: gagrice (Oct 06, 2008 4:44 pm)

There are a lot of "ifs" in this take. On first look 2,000 over a like modeled gassers appears and is a "STIFF" premium. However, IF the IRS tax credit is applicable to the buyer, and the 2003 TDI aftermarket sales hold up (4,500) more than 1.8T aka like model , THEN the premium gets reduced to something like PLUS $4,100.

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