The toxic tyrannical culture that killed Volkswagen

Discussion in 'Fred's House of Pancakes' started by Georgina Rudkus, May 27, 2026 at 7:33 AM.

  1. Georgina Rudkus

    Georgina Rudkus Senior Member

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    This video explains how a toxic corporate culture of the leadership only wanting and demanding only good news from his workers get lied to and leads to destruction.

    Eg, Hitler; Putin.


     
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  2. John321

    John321 Senior Member

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  3. Georgina Rudkus

    Georgina Rudkus Senior Member

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    291444_upload_2026-5-27_10-31-4.png

    Another response with the "kill the messenger disease."

    The video does not automatically equate to my own opinion or findings.

    The sky did fall in history many times.

    The last one was the COVID 19 pandemic.

    The current developing one is the king's self created Iran War crisis.
     
    #3 Georgina Rudkus, May 27, 2026 at 10:45 AM
    Last edited: May 27, 2026 at 10:57 AM
  4. Isaac Zachary

    Isaac Zachary Senior Member

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    I didn't watch the video, but I do think that VW went down the tubes by lowering their reliability while increase the price of their cars.

    It used to be that if you wanted a good quality car that didn't break the bank you bought a VW. Now you buy a Toyota or Honda, although the general economy means that some of us can no longer afford even the cheapest of the Toyotas or Hondas. It's weird how economics work.
     
  5. Georgina Rudkus

    Georgina Rudkus Senior Member

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    Yeah, there's a need for basic, inexpensive and easy to maintain transportation.

    Ferdinand Porsche did that with the original design of the Kraft durch Freude Wagen designed for Hitler, who saw it as he much admired Henry Ford and his Model T.

    After the war, it was the British who supported the original Wolfsburg plant that renamed the KDF Wagen as the Beetle.

    How Volkswagen has swayed away from its roots.
     
    #5 Georgina Rudkus, May 27, 2026 at 12:09 PM
    Last edited: May 27, 2026 at 12:26 PM
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  6. ColoradoBoo

    ColoradoBoo Senior Member

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    Yep it's sad watching VW going downhill but it's not like they aren't responsible for it. I mean, who decided to replace as much as possible inside the engine compartment with plastics? Good grief! My son-in-law has a 2019 VW Jetta GLI with a 2.0l Turbo and I've helped him use my lift to do maintenance on it. Plastic oil pan and an insane rubberish drain plug that requires a special tool to unscrew it. (Or just grab an extra-large flathead screwdriver.) The thing takes only premium fuel which can really hurt when gas is $4.50 for unleaded and $5.30 for premium. It, also, takes a "special" motor oil and the VW dealer doesn't even sell it because it only buys in bulk and they told me VW Germany will only ship them like a minimum of 50 cases and they don't have any place to store it. (So my SIL uses Liquid Molly which is $50 for 5-qts...and, of course, the Jetta takes 6-quarts!)
    He said all VW owners know they aren't long-lasting vehicles....about 5-years and 100,000 miles you'd better start looking to trade it in. It is a fast car, though....got her up to 102 on the expressway up to Denver with plenty of power left from that turbo.
    But Toyota's in trouble with, yet, another 3rd recall on the V-6 engine....come on, Toyota, get your friggin act together!! NOBODY wanted Toyota to replace their V-6 and V-8's with turbo engines....will go down in history as another boneheaded mistake by Corporate beauracrats...
    .
     
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  7. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    haven' considered a vdumb since our 70's rust bucket rabbit
     
  8. Isaac Zachary

    Isaac Zachary Senior Member

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    Computer simulated engineering. These parts are simulated to try to get some 200,000 miles or so out of them at the lowest price point possible. But computer simulations aren't always an accurate representation of reality. Some companies, like Toyota, put even more testing into their research and development making them tend to be more reliable.

    But you've considered Toyuck-a, and now G-Muck.
     
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  9. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    yes, had pretty good luck with Toyuca-a over the last 20+ years, gen 3 excepted.

    back to G-Muck because of hearing good things, and low price.

    I will even consider vdumb again if they can entice me, but id4 won't do it.
     
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  10. ColoradoBoo

    ColoradoBoo Senior Member

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    Yep, my wife, already has her retirement car...her 24 Corolla AWD Hybrid....great little car! I'm, still, waiting to replace my 14 Tundra V-8 with a truck that can pull our camper....will need a good one when I'm retired and we visit places on our bucket list. The last thing I want to worry about is the V-6 in the Tundra blowing up on us so I've been looking at all the other makers of trucks and, to be honest, not very impressed. A similar Ford F-250 will run me over $70K but those engines AND transmissions aren't the best things.....very sad state of affairs for truck owners right now.
     
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  11. ETC(SS)

    ETC(SS) The OTHER One Percenter.....

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    Gee.....I wish MY company was "going down the tubes" like Das Volkswagens are. :eek:

    Not a particular fan of the company (nor the one in Aichi, for that matter) but facts do not care about how people 'feel.'

     
  12. futurist

    futurist Member

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    VW (and Volkswagen Gruppe -- formerly Volkswagen Audi Gruppe, VAG :p ) have been the poster child of a particularly German way of building cars since about the late '80s (generally not luxury cars, tho now they're not exempt either)...

    VWs used to be pretty damned unkillable, even if you needed listen to savvy owners for how. I still see diesel Rabbits with beds toodling around here on Maui, tho rust has claimed most of them. Couple of 1st gen GTIs, too. And of course, Beetles will never go away completely -- not when you can overhaul or build up the engine on your workbench, and drop it into your car yourself w\ no helper :p

    But that hasn't been VW since the '90s. They know they can't invest in the kind of testing needed to produce long-lived cars anymore, for 3 reasons: 1) takes too long for models to come to market, losing market share; 2) longer R&D means more time spending money and less time earning revenue selling under-developed so-so-reliable units; 3) emissions will demand new designs in 5 model yrs on the market anyway, why make them last 10+ yrs. So why not just build higher-performance cars built so-so, and let the customer bear the cost of component failure, like all luxury cars are developed?

    Take the Golf GTI, a model with a cult following globally, for good reason. Good ol' Gruppefuhrer Ferdinand Piƫch deemed in new millennium, VW would be a luxury brand (Phaeton), Audi would be in Formula 1, and all VWs would become technological marvels -- the then-new 4th-gen GTI would indeed be this, with the first Golf Rs also debuting in this gen. Haldex AWD, VR6 engines, keeping up with LT-powered C4 Corvettes around tight technical tracks, that sort of hyperbole. But they fell apart inside, almost as soon as you drove them home (knew a friend with a non-GTI 4th-gen -- that thing was a pile of dealer warranty repair receipts) -- which in turn drove forums to find solutions to keep their pride and joys present at the dozens of VW meets arounds the country for this gen in particular... thus their following. I want to drive something that performs like this, so need my boys' help to make that happen.

    But do you find OEM-stock / lightly-modded 4th-gens still driving around ten yrs later? Faaack no. Their 'devotees' have long since bought 5th-, 6th-, or 7th-gen GTIs, and left all the problems past 80K, to someone who wants them -- those who have no idea what kind of commitment they've bought under that thin Plexus craigslist pseudo-shine...

    Plus, the Germans seem less afraid of just going full-cynical on components, esp if they can be made of thermoplastic. I would never buy an ICE-powered vehicle, with a plastic f***ing oil pan. Was hard enough trusting plastic valve covers, but they seem to have proven their worth, at least in the 8-yr-lifespan chiseled into bonds tying their engineers' hands (also don't hold hot oil in them, just drips off). Toyota thank the gods have resisted this well-you're-just-gonna-lease-it-anyway builder's brief, and have a steel pan with a metal drain plug, just as has worked for 100 yrs. 'Well Herr Customer, you're not supposed to take your Golf off-road, that's why you hit a root and cracked your plastic oil pan bitte, warranty denied'. Have you lived in any big US city lately, VW execs? Potholes from our crumbling infrastructure are cracking them just as much as a spruce root. What are you saving with a 2-cm-thick thermoplastic pan, vs, a steel one, a pound? Plus, a steel one loves 270F oil in it, not so much the same plastic as in your stepladder* :rolleyes:

    There's a perception that 'the candle that burns twice as bright' is worth the clout, despite the 'burns half as long' part. This attracts the sort of crowd that buys 15-yo Phaetons, stances them, then drives them around with rusted exhausts, one working headlamp and non-functional interior switches -- I have a badge. Ignoring of course, what they really have -- a shitestack designed to be bolted (or glued) together by assembly robots and no one else, made to last for the first owner exclusively -- which these people are not.

    Toyota I like, because worldwide, those suits still give two shites about how their cars perform long-term -- meaning after 10 yrs. But this current gen of more complex models (my 5G included) seem to've partially abandoned this idea you can find a 5G Prius LE still pulse-gliding along, in 2040. Cam phasers that constantly run as long as the ICE is ON? Doesn't point to a car that will flip its odometer with oil changes and owner maint. Turbos were the first sign they've lost their way, just like the company did 20 yrs ago, chasing volume :cautious:

    Buyer beware -- even for Toyota hybrids. Hope mine lasts as long as I expect it to, but if it doesn't, not like the company didn't warn me :unsure:

    ---

    * nor wet rubber cam belts and oil pump drive belts, Honda (1.5L turbo L15B7) and Ford (1.0L, 1.6L, 2.7L EcoBurst motors) assaulted loyal customers with. They've -- surprise -- not lasted their warranty periods w/o massive engine damage. What were you thinking...? Exactly -- can't, when you're blinded by greed, and don't give two shites about plausible-deniability-bilking you dry :rolleyes:
     
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  13. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    German engineering slogan KICS = Keep It Complicated Stupid! owned a late 70's rabbit and learned my lesson quickly