bnt83
Final Approach
My 2015 Jetta TDI has a Urea system.
My Dad's jetta is 2014 and doesn't.
My 2015 Jetta TDI has a Urea system.
My 2015 Jetta TDI has a Urea system.
I'm sure that, in addition to the huge fine the government levies, there will be a class action suit asking for damages for the increased fuel cost related to the software change as well as the decreased resale value of the vehicles.
BBC says this might cost VW $17 billion.
Potentially something like a $35k fine per vehicle.
Hell...my 2011 Chevy truck with a window sticker that says 22 MPG gets about 16. And that's on 2 lane roads doing 55 to 60 MPH...I won't even mention what it gets on the interstate doing 80.
Well over 25% below window sticker mileage...
...I don't see any class action lawsuits over that one!
BBC says this might cost VW $17 billion.
One must wonder how Volkswagen thought they'd get away with this wothout it eventually being discovered.
You are safe. Those aren't under the gun.
...
The EPA is a predatory, anti American agency, against the needs of the populace, and only out for their own growth. The Clean Air and Water Act has been allowed to be abused by our government and created a overly restrictive, fascist organization in the EPA.
May you breathe smoke. Drink wastewater. And enjoy it.
One must wonder how Volkswagen thought they'd get away with this wothout it eventually being discovered.
fixing a lot of "broken" engines where idiots either blindly unbolted emissions equipment without reprogramming the ECM or got "smarter" and started plugging emissions control lines with anything they could find, especially in a way that cannot be easily seen. (ever seen a bolt stuck deep in a vacuum line?)
So, if it's standard, why does every article I read just say "2015 Jetta"?
The Bugatti Veyron costs millions more to make than they earn from the sale, which is in the millions. Volkswagon subsidizes them so they can say they make the fastest car, or some such. So, everyone who purchases a Volkswagon participates in welfare for rich people.
May you breathe smoke. Drink wastewater. And enjoy it.
Was there a point to this?
May you breathe smoke. Drink wastewater. And enjoy it.
Yes, if you purchase a Volkswagon you are paying welfare for insanely rich people.
I've not found anything that says I'm not.
It does seem they tried to go the cheap route and not install the urea system.
It appears that 2015 was the first year urea became standard on the Jetta.
So, if it's standard, why does every article I read just say "2015 Jetta"?
Redneck hillbillies love their smoke tunes, DPF deletes, 4 inch exhausts, and anything else that makes their oversized POS trucks belch out more black smoke. I really wish the EPA would go after the Malones, EFILives, etc. of the world and bury them with enough legal costs to shut them down.
First, it's Volkswagen.
Most car manufacturers build concept cars, or have factory racing teams, or invest in other industries. The purpose being investment in engineering, with the belief that some of that will apply back to bread and butter cars most of us poor folk drive. The DSG transmission is a great example of this. It's not exactly welfare. It's more R and D.
I live out in the lands of these idiot trucks. They really are the stupidest trucks ever put together. I put them in the same category as the low rider with it's circus hydraulics and tiny little wheels,,,
I would hazard to guess far more than GA does.
Clearly not a lot of native Southern Californians in this thread. A lot of hate for smog laws here, but if you grew up in Southern California, lived in, or frequently went to LA and travel there now, you see the results of the smog laws. You can see the San Gabriel mountains nearly all the time.
A friend of mine remarked that the smell of exhaust from vintage cars now makes him feel sick. When you drive behind a vintage car and you can easily smell that old vintage smog, it is hard to remember back when all the cars on the road smelled like that.
The smog laws work. Sadly the implementation and enforcement of the laws are kind of wacky, or criminal at times at least here in California. The state does abuse the law at times to pull in revenue.
Yes, if you purchase a Volkswagon you are paying welfare for insanely rich people.
Sorry, my mistake. I misread and misreported the info from a report found in Financial Times. It sounds like all the 2015 models are included in the effort include the urea based cars.
I'm wondering, do you plan to take your car in when there is a software fix/flash avail?
Yes, if you purchase a Volkswagon you are paying welfare for insanely rich people.
My issue with much of EPA regulation is the somewhat arbitrary nature of it. You can force diesel engine makers to meet NOx standards in ppm, but it, in turn, forces them to be less fuel-effecient thereby burning more fuel and pumping more NOx into the environment. All because they have to hit a specific number . . . it's just often a forest for the trees situation.
I can cite a more personal example with the EPA for a facility my company purchased a few years back. We bought the company, found out they were using MEK and other solvents in their process, and had been doing so for the better part of the last few decades. It was a small, family-owned business so there was no EPA reporting or anything of that nature. So, being the good company we are, we self-report the situation and provide a cleanup plan. The EPA levies hefty fines and requires all sorts of public notice/commentary periods which we have to publish in the local newspapers and such. Nothing about the cleanup has been changed due to us contacting the EPA, just the levying of fines and bureaucracy along with lost time. That is my problem with the EPA in many instances: they often function only in a way to generate income for themselves.
The EPA serves an important role, and should exist simply because people and corporations don't always align their practices with the best interests of the environment. I just think they are far too overreaching and less helpful than they could be, just like most other government institutions.
True, but most don't build specialty cars that they sell for a huge loss. And most of the technologies developed for the Veyron are ver, very specific.
You apparently like subsidizing insanely rich people. Good for you. Free country and all that. I choose not to do so.
Didn't the VWs actually pass the tests?
This will be very interesting to watch.
The regulations are specific about "defeat devices" - that's the issue.Didn't the VWs actually pass the tests?
This will be very interesting to watch.