AUTOMOTIVE RELIABILITY
All automotive manufacturers have reliability issues with some or certain
of their vehicles and Volkswagen is no exception even though it is one of
the
largest car manufacturer in the world. Globally the masses buy cars in general based on its looks
(aesthetics), price, performance and reliability but not necessarily in that
order.
In my opinion, reliability play a major role in decision making and
should always be considered first. Hence, the question that begs to be asked is,
"What's the use of owning a smart looking car with better than average
performance that you acquired at a very attractive price but is as
unreliable as a career politician".
Understandably car manufacturers at times produce
lemons (The Monday Car)
or unknowingly fit a substandard part to some of the vehicles which only
becomes apparent when it starts to fail in the field, necessitating a
recalls. However, often times these troublesome parts slip through the
cracks and fail infrequent enough and disparate enough as not to alert car
owners to this pending problem and that is replaceable under
recall.
Case in point, the Volkswagen Jetta 2006 - 2019 appears to have the most
issues — aka Common Problems — necessitating seven (7)
major recalls due to some 295 complaints by owners to the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). When these statistics are compare to
the more reliable models, like the
Volkswagen Golf GTI and the Tiguan
which had absolutely no recalls and a very small number of complaints
registered with the NHTSA, one notices the reliability factor.
MISLEADING DATA
This reminds me of how computer hardrives manufactures like Seagate, Western-Digital and Hewlett-Packard etc label hardrives by rating them at 1 Million hours — MTBF (mean time before failure). One would be misled to believe when manufacturers as a whole guarantees the item/part in question for 1 million hours of operation before failure,. Whereas the said item has not even been in existence or production for this length of time, let alone tested for failure for this duration. One (1) million hours roughly equates to 114 years, so one can see how misleading that rating really is.
WHAT MTBF REALLY MEANS
Having said all that, I feel that MTBF is a really bad measure for
determining the probable life span of any item, be it a hardrive, a light
bulb, a printer, a TV, a car part or an entire car. However, what MTBF
really means, is that if the manufacturer built 1 million units and started
running burn-in test on all of them at the same time, one item is expected
to fail per hour. The same hold true for producing 5000 units, implying 1 unit will fail every 5000 hours.
This is especially
true for electronic
components, its failure varying between the stringent implementation or slack
specification and tolerances they are manufactured under.
The German tradition and culture of manufacture in general gives rise
to vehicles one can rely on with proven reliability and durability based on robust design, assembly, pride and attention to detail. This
is noticeable on cars built and assembled in
Wolfsburg, Lower Saxony, Germany
when compared to German designed cars manufactured/assembled elsewhere among which are South
Africa, Mexico, Brazil, Asia etc.
If your Volkwagen's VIN number starts with SN, ST or W you have a car that may outlast you whereas any other
"world manufacturer identifier" prefix will virtually guarantee you
a life of replacing parts. Purely because they are assembled from parts
originating from ancillary OEM parts manufacturers and Chinese auto
parts manufacturers instead of genuine VW parts
originating from Germany.
Common Problems on Volkswagen vehicles mainly stems from these
sub-standard rogue parts and several of them may be responsible for your
Overactive Check Engine Light, from your leaking coolant, to excessive
oil use and smoking, to engine overheating, to mention but a few.
EXCESSIVE SMOKING
Hard plastic has become the preferred product from which to
manufacture modern day car spare parts — in place of
diecast aluminum machined to perfection — and is used in abundance in most cars to reduce manufacturing
costs, the overall weight of the vehicle that consequently improve its
millage.
However these plastic parts do become brittle over time thus prone to
failure due to the engine heat. For example a blocked plastic
PCV (Positive Crankcase Ventilation) valve — responsible for extracting the blow-by gases from the
crankcase — may be the cause of rough idling, poor acceleration and an
increase in oil consumption and as a consequence
excessive exhaust smoke. When detected by to O2 sensor will
cause the Check Engine Light
(CEL) to trigger.
OVER HEATING
Plastic thermostat assemblies commonly leak prematurely when they become contaminated by engine oil
from a leaking PCV system. This may lead to that
stubborn coolant leak that you cannot find is
more-likely-than-not caused by plastic pipe couplings, plastic hoses
connectors, or perhaps the plastic radiator tanks located behind the AC
condenser that developed a minute crack, all able to cause
overheating.
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