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Car & Driver long term test of 09 VW Jetta TDI from March 2010 issue

Discussion in 'Diesels' started by cwerdna, Feb 3, 2010.

  1. GTIDan

    GTIDan New Member

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    On roominess I guess it's the feeling than as you pointed out there pretty close to even.

    On the battery your correct as far as it goes but..............you forget the nickel has to be mined (northern Canada) than put on a large boat and taken to France I believe where it's partially refined.......than put back on another boat and taken to China where it's refined some more and than put back on yet another boat to Japan where it's finished. The carbon footprint comes from all the transporting of the materials and finally, all the battery is not recyclable.

    Nice to visit your site and thanks for letting me chime in as they say.
     
  2. usbseawolf2000

    usbseawolf2000 HSD PhD

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    I am exeeding EPA highway MPG in the winter because I have a few miles of congestion at the same section of the highway. Once in the HOV lane, I go about 65 to 70 mph. I am averaging 49.2 MPG. My average speed is around 45-50mph.

    Some 2010 owners had unrealist expection in winter at high speed. Are you getting over 35 MPG going 75MPH in the snow? That's the kind of expectation placed in Prius.
     
  3. usbseawolf2000

    usbseawolf2000 HSD PhD

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    GTIDan,

    Nickel is in the steel frame and diesel engine block of Jetta. It too had to be shipped to Germany and then to Mexico(?).

    Nickel in HV battery is around 30 lbs. Your 12v lead acid battery is heavier than that. Lead is more toxic than Nickel. 12v battery lasts 3-5 years. HV battery has warranty for 10 years. You get the drift.

    TDI exhaust is not recyclable. How do you dump or recycle all the soot collected in the particulate filter? If I remember correctly, you need to change it every 60k miles.
     
  4. GTIDan

    GTIDan New Member

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    The engine is built in Germany and shipped to Mexico along with thousands of other items. I know nothing of large amounts of nickel in the frame or motor.

    The block is cast iron and the head is aluminum alloy.

    Go to youtube and type Top Gear reviews the Prius and you'll see one that explains the carbon footprint. Bigger than a Land Rover Discovery........

    As for the soot. It's burnt up in the DPF filter from time to time. VW calls it a regenerating cycle. No. it does not need to be replaced at 60K. VW recommends that it be tested at 120K to see if it meets specs and than rechecked every 10K after that. No one I know of has made it to 120K yet since the car engine was introduced in 2009 so I have no feedback on that part yet.

    I should point out it made Ward's ten best engines in 2009 and 2010.

    You want a 'real' winner here? Put a 3 cyclinder diesel with the Hybrid system.....say in a Prius and than see what the MPG would be. At least 15 mpg more. They are doing it in Europe right now but not with a Toyota.
     
  5. cwerdna

    cwerdna Senior Member

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    Wrong. Clarkson's a moron and he's basing statements off the thoroughly debunked CNW junk science that refuses to die. Top Gear is NOT a show to watch if you want factual information and objective reviews of any car.

    So, a 4 ms delay let them go full throttle twice w/no movment?

    As for the electric heater, they stated
    Again, your carbon footprint statement is bogus. Again, this is based on thoroughly debunked junk science that refuses to die.
     
  6. cwerdna

    cwerdna Senior Member

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    You probably left out depreciation.

    You mention 30 years and USB is saying 9 years. I went to New Car Prices, Used Cars for Sale, Car Reviews, and Quotes - IntelliChoice and they unfortunately only have 2010 Sonatas. Every 4 cylinder 2010 Sonata I've looked up has a higher 5 year ownership cost than a 2010 Prius IV w/the smallest gap being $2361 w/the GLS model to well over $7K for a limited model.

    $3/gal average for gas over a 30 or 9 year period is pretty darned optimistic if you ask me.
     
  7. timo27

    timo27 Member

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    I tested a couple TDIs and liked a lot of things about them. I've driven manuals all my life until the pious (the balt/wash area is *sucko* regarding stop and go, so that was a big consideration).

    The strange thing is, I found both TDIs annoyingly easy to stall in first gear--maybe a learning curve thing. What are your thoughts on this, as an owner?

    FWIW, I didn't experience the lag C/D described in the DSG--found it very responsive.

    I really do miss driving a manual--just so much more fun. The Pious planetary gear setup is a lot better than regular slush-box autos, IMO. I also like how when you take your foot off the gas the car slows down like a manual, unlike regular autos--I assume due to the regen braking. The driving position/dynamics of the VW were much better than that of the Pious. Trade-offs, trade-offs.

    It does seem VW may be turning the corner re reliability--I sure hope so, because they are great cars in so many ways.

    Cheers,
    Tim
     
  8. efusco

    efusco Moderator Emeritus
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    You're gonna lose any semblance of credibility very quickly if you start referencing TG as a factual source.

    The nickel used for Prius batteries is a tiny fraction of the amount of nickel mined and shipped...which means only a fraction of the carbon produced is attributable to the Prius battery. As pointed out, the heinous lies that won't die and seem to be the sole source of criticism come from the fully debunked CNW report by a Detroit apologist who made up 'facts' based upon lies and absolutely no hard data. And, as pointed out, the batteries last the life of the car and then the nickel can be recycled...spread that carbon footprint out over a few decades and how big do you really think it is?
     
  9. durallymax

    durallymax Member

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    My mom has an 06 tdi with the dsg. It's not an idiot proof transmission. You have to be gentle with it to get it going but one your going it's very smooth. It's like a manual transmission you don't justfloor it and dump the clutch.

    I've driven hers a few times and it Heatsup very quickly up north here.

    As for killing the manuals when strting out, I would elieve it is due to gear ratio if othe cars it is very steep and you need to feather it out a little longer than some cars but on yor going you can idle along all day.

    Dpfs of today are pitiful. They are simply a bandaid just to get the diesel industry through te next few years why thy refine their in cylinder technologies. Same goes for the urea injection. Basically what happened was that things weren't ready in time so they did what they could to keep them legal till the new designs are tested.

    But make no mistake the dpf ist a bad thing. It does it's job. And as long as you stomp the throttle from time to time it won't need to regen very often.

    For those saying diesel exhaust can't be recycled, they're right however the exhaust from the gasoline engine can't be either.

    When people compare engine exhaust I always tell turn to lock themselves in their garage with a clean diesel, if you truly wanna killyourself your gonna be there awhile. Diesels emit next to nothing when it comes to CO. Nonwhite of this relates to the environmental impact of te two that's Nogher topic for another time.

    Now why do diesels make torque. Well turbo is part of it but the main reasons are the long stroke, High compression ratio and high energy fuel.
     
  10. Flying White Dutchman

    Flying White Dutchman Senior Member

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    the DPF will clean itself by burning up the DP making it even smaller
    after that those even smaller DP wil not be mesaured for environmental( human cancer ) impact.
    its already proven that these even smaller DP will infiltrade the blood stream so small.
     
  11. usbseawolf2000

    usbseawolf2000 HSD PhD

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    ....and permanent declines in lung capacity.
     
  12. GTIDan

    GTIDan New Member

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    Whoa there...........coming down hard on me are you? :)

    To your comments above:
    1) I own a TDI and can tell you there is no response problem if you follow what I said "wait a split second before pounding the pedal and you'll have no problem. I guess from what you say BMW, Lambos, Ferrari's just don't get it either huh? Cause they do the same thing.

    2) My TDI is a US version and it has the low watt heater. Turn the temp control to high, switch on the fan and I have heat 'without' turning car on if I wish. So...............what's the problem.

    The guys at Top Gear (while they do act goofy) have forgot more about cars than the (morons) who work at C/D and Motor Trend. Only Automobile magazine here in the states comes close to matching the knowledge of those boys in England.

    I did go back and look up the report you mentioned and found it an interesting read. Reminds me about Climate Change in that those 'experts' who say it's bunk can usually trace back their funding to the oil companies. It is good to know Toyota is active in recycling the batteries and such. Good job Toyota..........now just make my other car a Lexus IS250 stop talking off on me.

    Guys, I only dropped by to point out some flaws in the C/D Jetta review. Not trying to raise any feathers here with anyone.

    Both are nice cars for what they do but, as I said from the outset, I, and most every review I've read, feel the fun to drive ratio in the Jetta makes it the right choice. To wit: Can you shift your Prius like a manual? Nope, Does your Prius have a Sport Mode? Nope. (Sport Mode keeps the car in each gear longer and downshifts sooner) Can your Prius cruise the autobahn all day at 120 MPH? Nope. Then where's the beef here? If it's all about MPG..........hey, you win.....but isn't there more to driving than that?

    Take care, enjoy your cars and stay safe. Ciao for now :)
     
  13. durallymax

    durallymax Member

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    Actually what happens during regeneration is quite simple and the particulates stay in the filters.

    There are two there are two filters on the system. The oxidation catalyst a the dpf. The oc collects the soot while driving then in regen immense heat is created (912* minimum 1500 ideal) and the soot us regenerated into the dpf. Ten when a dpf becomes full it is taken to a dpf service facility wherethey cleanse is on their machine which collect the particles which are then disposed if as hazardous waste.

    What urea injection does is convert nox into Nitrogen and water.

    Currently these are the technologies available. But new in cylinder technologies are being developed to eliminate both systems. Cummins actually has a motor design that will accomplish this.

    As for small particles they probably exist in diesels as well, however gasoline engines particles are very small as well.
     
  14. jayman

    jayman Senior Member

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    I recently testdrove a 2010 VW "new" Golf tdi Wagon, the Comfortline series. One with DSG, one with stickshift

    The interiors are light years beyond that offered by Toyota or Honda, far better seats and driving position. Better ride too, not sure how they can make a car that absorbs large bumps, yet still handles good

    But there is no way in hell I'd want the DSG. There are horror reports of the reliability issues with that system, and the one I test drove was so herky-jerky in stop-and-inch traffic I almost needed a barf bag
     
  15. jayman

    jayman Senior Member

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    A highway tractor will usually see enough constant rpm that the DPF will regenerate. What will kill the ORC and DPF is oil consumption. With EGR and higher temps, most 15W-40 oils are not up to the task, even those that meet the CJ-4 spec

    A neighbor O-O with a 2008 Kenworth/Cummins just had his DPF replaced under warranty, but it had around 300,000 on it. Apparently some of the earlier builds had a problem

    If a DPF equipped truck is driven in city traffic, eg refuse, pickup and delivery, utility, and especially with a lot of idle time, the DPF will clog.

    A manual regeneration can be started back at the yard, that usually takes 30-45 minutes
     
  16. jayman

    jayman Senior Member

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    Evan

    Put another way, compare the curb weight of my FJ to my recently sold '04 Prius. My FJ has MORE nickel in it than a Prius, yes batteries included

    I don't expect everybody to be a chemical engineer or a metallurgist so why not send them straight to the horse's mouth?

    http://www.nickelinstitute.org/index.cfm/ci_id/19020/la_id/1/document/1/re_id/0

    Applications

    The NiMH batteries in the Prius make up a teeny proportion of total automotive nickel use. A 6,500 lb Ford F-450 will have far more TOTAL nickel content than a Prius

    Let's not forget that although the Sudbury, ON, nickel mine of Inco/Vale is very large, only 2% of its output goes to Toyota
     
  17. durallymax

    durallymax Member

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    Kenoworth has had some issues with their dpfs.

    City traffic I a death sentence for a dpf but they still do their job.

    As long a the dpf Is plugged and in good operating condition it just needs to be cleansed and not replaced. Replacement cost on them is ridiculous though as they are full of precious metals.

    Manual regen is a great option and almost all vehicles have this feature but it's up to the operator to do it.

    The computer is now very smart too and as soon as it detects the dpf is gone te engine goes into limp home mode.

    However the aftermarket has found ways around the dpf, it's really nit hard. I've deleted the dpf and egr on some race trucks and the results are astonding. Just for kicks on the one truck I did we burnt one tank of fuel with the emissions equipment removed and a very good tune and picked up 10mpg. However this is illegal the fine to the owner of the vehicle is $1,400 and the fine to the shop that performed the modifications is $10,000.
     
  18. durallymax

    durallymax Member

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    NOTE: I'm on my iPod an can't edit the above post so if somebody would like to merge this that would be great.

    In addition to my above statement about removing the emissions equipment, it makes you wonder Joe much your saving by burning nearly 2 times as much fuel. I guess particulates would e the downside though.
     
  19. seftonm

    seftonm Member

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    Hi Tim, what year of TDI did you test drive? I stalled the 2009 with the new engine a few times before getting used to it. It may have idled around 850-900 rpm? I can't quite remember. But if the rpms drop below about 800, the ECU decides that's enough and cuts fueling so the car stalls. It may be to reduce wear on the flywheel but I'm not too certain on that. You only get 50-100 rpm to work with below idle speed before it's game over.

    Older TDIs like mine also have a bit of a learning curve. They don't react as well to high throttle while engaging the clutch as a gasser. The revs drop much faster. But once a driver learns what works and what doesn't, then it's quite easy to manage in traffic.
     
  20. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    You trust JC's opinion? I take it with a grain of salt (not just Prius stuff but anything European. If I wanted a true review of a European car that I'm unfamiliar with, Top Gear sure as heck isn't at the top of my list otherwise I might be in the same boat as you are, quoting incorrect figures).

    remember, TG is also the same magazine that shot a Gen 1 Prius and gave a COTY award to the Prius. Double-faced, aren't they?

    Don't get me wrong, I love TG. I have every single episode (except Season 3, Episode 1) on my hard drive. I love it for the entertainment purposes even though I'm a car nut (I still watch 5th Gear when they were on air).


    Umm... so you believe CNW Marketing? I've been to Sudbury and it definitely looks like Earth and not a lunar landscape :)