It's all part of the fun, surely?
I've replaced the dv, pcv, cam follower, cam belt & water pump, it's going in for a new clutch and flywheel in a week or so, and I haven't even had the car a year!
I try to keep my cars as long-term projects, so 5 years at the very least. For me, all these jobs are just part of the bigger picture in eventually getting to the point where it looks good, handles like it's on rails, goes like a stabbed rat, stops well, and of course is clean, tidy and reliable.
It'd be great if the whole of my budget went on upgrades and shiny bits, but that's just not the way it is unfortunately.
If I wanted a car I could just get in, drive, and not worry about maintenance, I'd have bought a brand new far eastern sh*tebox with a 9000 year warranty.
That just doesn't appeal to me though.
Agreed. I used to look forward to things breaking so I can fix them Not so much anymore as things are harder to get at these days. It's almost like VW (and other car makers for that matter) just tipped a load of bits into the hole and slammed the bonnet down. Job jobbed. Next.
I don't understand the poor German quality / design comments tbh. VW don't make chains or thermostats, or any of the engine bits. They literally just cast the block and head and assemble components bought in from OEM suppliers. It's not their fault a chain made by JWS wears out, or a chain tensioner made by INA fails, or a damper made by SACHS wears out, or bushes made by Febi perish etc etc
Any car is only as reliable as the maintenance and care it receives. I've seen my fair share of Japanese car failures over the years too. It's not just German cars.
I think it is VW's responsibility to pick and choose robustly manufactured parts from other suppliers, certainly to test them before adding them to their cars. No doubt things like chain tensioners aren't actually made by VW but VW ultimately carry the success of reliability ratings on their products as a whole, not just parts. Lets put it this way, if camshaft followers wearing through after 25k and destroying camshafts is the fault of the independent supplier parts then VW should test alternative suppliers parts otherwise it makes them look bad.
There is nothing in the service book saying that you should replace the follower every 25k yet we have all seen on here that unless you check you could land yourself with a massive repair bill just because you ran your car to maintenance schedule guidance for 50k. That is not acceptable in the slightest.
This 2.0 TFSI engine is not ground breaking technology. It is pretty straight forward in design. Aside from the cam follower issue you have the carbon issues with the valves getting coked up. Pretty poor design in my opinion to have to de-coke a 2005 vehicle! Another £250 spent on a so called well designed reliable vehicle.
Every manufacturer has its faults I agree but the Mk5 GTI seems to have a lot for a mass produced non-ground breaking engine.
Coming from another German brand I am surprised by how fragile these cars seem to be.