- This topic has 7 replies, 6 voices, and was last updated 11 years, 3 months ago by .
-
Topic
-
So it was time to show my son the ropes of buying his first used car. He had inherited $5000 from his uncle, so that was our ballpark figure. I gently suggested like a 1999 Honda Civic with medium miles, but he has a bit of a Steve Jobs high taste streak, so he couldnt find anything for the first few weeks. He finally saw a 2001 VW Passat and fell in love with the black paint, the swoops, and the good handling and all the gadgets. But we looked it up on Consumer Reports and saw how awful a reputation it had for almost everything failing on it every 3 months. What nailed it was seeing ANOTHER Passat being towed into the used car lot. I suggested he look more at Honda and Acuras, as I’ve had two Integras, since 1984, with excellent luck, only having to replace the odd alternator or caliper.
Anyway, we stumbled into a 2003 Acura TL and test drove it and I showed my son how to check thw ires, the sterring for tightness, the suspension over bumps, check the idiot lights, check for blue smoke on startup, and it was a 95 degree day so it only took 15 minutes of driving to verify the engine stayed cool. We decided and bought it on the spot. And thought we were lucky.
Now we look on the internet and find out that Acura really dropped the ball and made unreliable transmissions for 4 years, and then it’s unclear whether they applied a little cooling pipe addon fix and whether that made any diff. And there are weak hints that aftermarket sources have better clutch packs. And hints that Acura reprogrammed the ECU for slightly less smooth and slow shifts but less clutch pack wear. And other folks say the problem is with high second gear temps and that the cooling oil pipe fix does or dos not make much of a difference. Another plausible sounding expert says you can bypass most of the problems by manually shifting past second gear every time.
Anyway, this transmission works fine, now, at 171,000 miles, but what do you suggest we do? Drive gently? Drive 1-3-4-5? Be sneaky and resell the car before the tranny conks out? Have a fun male-bonding time and overhaul the transmission ourselves when it conks out? And can we remove the transmission without a big lift? I know, lots of hard questions, that’s why we come here.
Last option, wait til it conks out, then gently explain to son where we went wrong, in looking for flash over substance, not checking the Consumer Reports used car guide for black dots, and mentioning the parallels between flashy cars and flashy women– i.e. high maintenance and how they’ll often leave you stranded, in the rain, crying. (he has already learned that other lesson, at least twice already).
Many many thanks in advance.
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.