May 2009
my KA drives perfect in rain cold weather and night times.but as soon as the weather turns slightly warmer the engine revs high on its own and then suddenly drops as you are braking.can anyone help with any explanation as to why this happens.its only started happening in this last 12 months,it was fine till then.thanks for any help. Read more
Telegraph article on lots of crude surplus to demand..........
www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/energy/52...l
We of course are paying high prices for petrol/diesel and yet the laws of supply and demand has not brought down prices .....indeed they have risen lately.
Might be down to tax/vat etc rather than oil company prices. Read more
Four in Scapa Flow last time I checked.
I've just had to buy a new fuel filler hose elbow for SWMBO 306.
This rather insignificant piece of fuel proof hose is basically a 2" bore 90 degree rubber bend, that joins the fuel filler pipe to the fuel tank. I'm not complaining that this part is needed as the car is almost 10 years old, but the retail price (excluding VAT) is £21.67!
The kind man in the Peugeot dealership gave me 8% discount after much grovelling, (the part is NOT available via GSF etc.), but this must be one of the biggest rip-off's I've ever come across. Read more
The top hose on our 1993 Peugeot diesel includes a bleed screw and is about 150cms long and right angled in two places.
9 years ago it cost £35.. so heaven alone knows what now. Even then it was special order only.
hi hope some one can help have a 2005 TDCI 130 and have a severe lack of power seems to be very hesitant,surging and giving smoke out of exhaust when sitting about 65ish the power seems to surge and very little response from the engine when i acclorerate checked and cleaned the egr valve as it was solid with carbon but no change any ideas its done 127,000mls Read more
At 127k I would clean out the EGR and the inlet manifold not a big job and well worth doing.
Hi
Anyone have the new C5? Impressions? Read more
I've had two...
The first was a Tourer auto with the 2.0 HDI engine. As rcspeirs said above it's a little on the asthmatic side but very quiet, very refined, and surprisingly solid for a French car. Don't listen to people who still hold VAG aloft as some sort of build quality benchmark: Audi lurk in the bottom half of reliability tables, below Citroen, it's just the general perception is that such things are the other way around.
The ride isn't as "magic" as the older gas-suspended CX/BX/XM models of the 80s and 90s - you can't take sleeping policeman at 30mph and simply not feel them like you could in a CX - but it is both smooth and controlled. Unlike German rivals it won't transmit the road surface up through the car and replay it on your backside, and in this respect the controls seem rather distant. This feeling of 'remoteness' has been the C5's #1 criticism, but if you ask me it's exactly what you want when your government isn't spending what it should and your roads look like the surface of the moon. Citroens have always offered a way of anaesthetising you from poor tarmac and if you want something edgier, sharper and less soothing, it's simple... don't buy one!
For me the car has two areas where it falls down badly. The first is the criminal lack of rear legroom, and the second is the dashboard interface which tries to huddle everything behind a clunky menu driven UI that looks and feels like it was put together (a) in a hurry and (b) on the cheap. It also borrows too much graphical look and feel from the previous generation car and anyone upgrading from one to the other will be doubly disappointed. It's still not Bluetooth savvy, the navigation system still doesn't accept post code destinations, and while it does integrate a hands-free phone system you have to push your simcard into a tiny plastic cradle and push that into the dash. Really stupid.
The second C5 I had, and in fact still have, is the bigger, madder 2.7 biturbo diesel which radically alters things. The larger diameter wheels sharpen the ride without making it uncomfortable, and while it isn't that quick from the line - 0-60 takes ten seconds - the reason for this is pretty obvious. Like the C6, power delivery has been tightly reined to push you presidentially when moving from a standstill, with the urge you want only available above 30mph. At this point kick down is keen and sudden enough to catch you out. I've been up the back of people almost twice now.
The V6 oilburner is also the quietest and smoothest engine in the line-up. It feels like a GT and is happiest eating long distances. I shall be keeping it!
I'm looking at buying a 3.5T horsebox newly built on this chassis - higher mileage than anything else around but box appears a good build. I'd get it checked out prepurchase anyway but is 150,000 miles in 8 years (it's been with them 12 months) looking for trouble? Its first 5 years appears to be as parcel delivery, second life one owner before this.
Sure there's room to negotiate but am more than willing to walk away if it's likely to be off the road more than on / need everything replacing.
Thanks. Read more
Hi there,
I currently drive a VW Golf Gti 16v mk3 with 100,000 miles on it. The thing is bomb proof and a good mix of performance and comfort. With 150bhp and weighing only 1150kg its not as quick as modern hot hatches but its no slow coach!
Im a final year uni student a bit of a petrol head and skint. The golf does ok on fuel seeing as im quite heavy footed but as im really poor at the moment im thinking i should get something diesel until i finish uni and start a real job!
My question is, can anyone suggest any diesels that i could get for for £1000 or less that are good on fuel and could be kind of fun to drive. I have been looking at Peugeot 306 turbo diesels which do handle great but even with good torque, only having 90bhp is a bit of a big step down in performance! I am happy to accept a bit of a drop in performance but i dont want to be forever willing it to shift a bit more! Also i know many diesels like the golf are fine for 200,000 plus miles but i would rather something nearer the 100,000 mile mark.
Any help would be greatly appreciated! Thanks!
Read more
Lexus LS400? not cheap on fuel but don't break and 240-280bhp and can be had for well under a grand, use a bike when you don't need to drive or just don't eb so heavy footed they'll do 23-28mpg if you are gentle........7mpg if not.....
I suppose this thread is prompted by my slight disappointment with the experience of owning the Toyota Verso we bought new a year ago this month. In a sense, this week's discovery that it has a significant engine problem isn't the biggest factor here - I hope and trust our dealer's diagnosis is correct and that we'll get a complete fix and the reliability we rather assumed would be part of the Toyota package.
No, what I'm getting at is the point at which merely having a new car with some new toys is no longer enough. When the Verso was new, I used to look forward to the one day a week I'd take it on my long drive to work in place of my Volvo, both to give it some exercise and to prolong the Volvo's life. I could play podcasts from my iPod without messing about with the fiddly Griffin FM thingy, and generally enjoy being a bit higher up, having a wiper to clear the rain off the rear window, and being in something that still smelled new and clean.
Gradually, though, driving the Verso has served only to make me realize how much I like my six-year-old Volvo - and with the Verso in the workshop awaiting new injectors, and a family Bank Holiday outing in the Yaris courtesy biscuit tin too ghastly to consider, I was rather pleased that we could all go out in the S60 instead.
A few particulars in my case, generally cases of how ticking boxes on an equipment list does not guarantee lasting satisfaction:
- The Verso has dual-zone climate control, which sounds great and yes, it controls the cabin temperature. But it's controlled by an LCD display and six buttons that all look exactly the same, and when it's hot or cold outside, it never seems to put the air where I want it. After getting used to Volvo's set-and-forget CC masterpiece, this seems a poor alternative.
- Similarly, the Verso has a cruise control. But it's on a multi-way stalk control tacked behind the steering wheel at about five o'clock, with counter-intuitive movements that I can't remember from one use to the next so that I can't use it without looking down at it. It's not illuminated, so at night I can't use it at all. I keep telling myself I'll get used to it but I don't think I will.
- Then there's the instrument panel. I can probably excuse it not having a temperature gauge - as NC has commented, that only informs you of relative change anyway, so a system of lights works about as well. But I do object to not being able to display the key data of main odometer, trip mileage, time of day and outside temperature all at once. It's like going back to the days when a watch that made you press a button just to see the time was considered a sign of progress!
- The seats aren't as comfortable as I'd hoped either, although they're far from bad. I've learned to tolerate the ratchet lever for rake adjustment, but I still don't like the height adjuster that merely cranks up the rear edge of the seat like one of those stand-you-up chairs from the back pages of the Telegraph.
- And that iPod connection I was so pleased with is an ergonomic pain too. Unless you spend the night before your trip compiling an iTunes playlist, the only sensible way to select your listening material is to select it before you plug the Pod in. The T3's audio system sounds pretty duff too - and it doesn't manage to maintain tune with an RDS FM station on a long journey.
This amounts to a long list of minor gripes about what is, for the most part, a pretty well thought-out and commodious family car, that we still plan to keep for a long time. My point is that many of the 'features' that look so good on the spec sheet don't quite deliver on their promises.
The corresponding features on my middle-aged Volvo, on the other hand, continue to delight me just as they did when the car was new. Is this the difference between a 'mass market' brand and a 'premium' product? All my gripes are about the human-machine interface, to which Volvo simply seems to have given more thought than Toyota did. Or is this an entirely unfair comparison between a car that was listed at £21,000 even in 2002 and one priced at barely £19,000 (not that we paid that much) six years later?
Enough of me. What experiences do Backroomers have things that have failed to delight as they should? Read more
> Is this the difference between a 'mass market' brand and a 'premium' product?<
Yes. Your gripes mainly pertain to the interior and that's one of the key differences between mass market and "premium".
Three years ago I test drove various A4s, X-Types, IS250s, 9-3s etc. Shortly afterwards I had a C-Max hire car for a day. The difference in handling was tiny and even the performance shortfall wasn't that much. However the C-Max's cabin, controls, radio etc. felt very nasty indeed compared to those (admittedly far more expensive) vehicles.
I suppose it's either me or do newer cars have smaller steering wheel compared to their predecessors in the past 20-30 years?
Whilst looking at an old Rover P3 this morning in Beds, the wheel is huge!
Is this due to advancement to steering & suspension design? Read more
The steering wheel on my car is absolutely enormous as it's an old Mercedes. I find it strangely comforting and I think it helps me drive in a more relaxed fashion than the positively Gokart sized thing BMW chose to fit in my company car.
Oddly, the reason why the Austin All Aggro had a quartic steering wheel was to offer a compromise between steering directness at higher speeds (holding the wheel around the sides) and leverage for lower speed (holding the wheel at the corners) in those long gone pre-PAS days. So, not as stupid as everybody thought.
1.5dci just had engine refurbished and refitted. Garage have been trying to start it for a week without success. Engine is turning over. Fault code apparently says low fuel pressure. It started ok before engine was removed so there wasn't a problem with fuel coming through before. Any ideas? Read more
the injectors are coded to pump/ecu so they might have to be recoded,either someone with the diagnostic capability or main agent.
or the delphi injectors themselves are prone to failure when undone or done up,especially if an air gun is used on them.
sorry for the bad news!
Sounds like an electronic engine management problem which is temperature sensitive.