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opionions please.. jetta wagon TDI vs Gasser
so,
another VW Jetta thread from me I want a new car, the 86 944 is running fine, but I spend a lot of time in the car and I'd like something quieter and maybe easier to get in and out of, and I've been out of college for 17 years :( and I've yet to buy a new car (motorcycle, different story) the Jetta wagons look really practical but which one? base models only in this comparison jetta wagon gasser; $20595 23/33 mpg 5 cylinder inline, no turbo 5 speed stick jetta wagon tdi; $25795 30/42 mpg 4 cylinder turbo diesel 5 speed stick I just checked local fuel prices and diesel is now cheaper than premium :) but an extra 5 G for a diesel :confused: can I expect the diesel to really last a lot longer than the gasser? will maintanence be less with the oil burner? no plugs, plug wires, ignition system ect add about 10% for the out the door price |
We rented the TDI wagon on our last Germany trip. Drove it 2 week, very impressed. If I had to buy a new car right now I would seriosly consider it. Don't know how long we'd have to drive it to break even, but I really like this wagon platform.
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I have a 2011 TDI sportwagen with the DSG. Plenty if torque and power and is a great car for road trips. Averaged 48 Mpg from NC to NY driving an average speed of 75 with a full load. Used 3/4 tank each way. If I were to sell I would only take a 4k deprecation hit, not bad after two years of ownership.
Plus I do not have to pay for emission inspections, just safety. Only issue is the instrument cluster with the odometer crapped out (common issue with the new VW) so the mileage is off , but it extended the warranty. |
I just did a couple hundred miles in a fairly new Jetta TDI and was impressed, it seemed to have plenty of power and got great mileage, the guy that owned it said he would break even on the cost over gas in a little over a year. It was quiet and comfortable.
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My son has a Jetta TDI and loves it. Gets approx 50 MPG highway driving.
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I've focused on buying Diesel vehicles because of the ethanol in gasoline. And knowing they are playing more and more with the gasoline formulas, which are not good for the engines, I'd rather have a diesel.
Assuming gas and diesel are $4/gallon $5000 = $4*(miles)/33mpg-$4*(miles)/42mpg miles=192000 on hwy $5000 = $4*(miles)/23mpg-$4*(miles)/30mpg miles=123214 in town |
I own both diesel and gas vehicles and there is no doubt that diesel produces more mpg and the modern ones have almost none of the attributes the consumer in North America didn't buy...noisy, smelly, etc. Fifteen years ago when I first bought a diesel, the price of diesel was always much cheaper than regular...not so today. Around here and down the Pacific coast of the US ( at least seemingly on a recent trip) the price of diesel is almost always close to the price of premium. In this pricing environment (for 6-8 years or so) I'd start to wonder if after paying $5000 more initially, that it made sense to buy diesel in North America. I recently heard that at least one truck manufacturer (large trucks) is in the process of developing a gasoline engine because the economics of the diesel has swung so out of whack. On a recent trip to Europe I paid noticeably less for diesel than the posted for regular so it's no wonder that so many of their passenger vehicles are diesel. I'm sure the TDI is a great car but I'm not sure if the price difference makes any economic sense. Cheers
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Make sure you read up on high pressure fuel pump failure (HPFP) on these new TDIs. It appears to be the intermediate shaft issue of the VW diesel world. You run a small risk of fuel pump failure and a very large repair bill due to the contamination of the fuel system with metal debris from the failed pump.
I have a 2011 Golf TDI with the 6 speed stick and am at 31k miles now. It has been a great car with no issues. The fuel pump failure issue has me worried to the point where I will re-evaluate the situation at 60k (end of drivetrain warranty). As far as paying $5k more for the diesel, that's a non brainer IMHO: - Resale is significantly higher, to the point where you may make all your money back down the line. The gas VWs really don't hold their value well at all. - Between resale and fuel savings, you probably only have to drive half what Red Beard calculated for ROI mileage - I am pretty sure the TDI comes with a higher trim level than base gas model, which also needs factoring in on the purchase price. Let us know what you decide! G |
VW's best diesel is the older A4. By best I mean longest lasting and lowest cost of ownership. The new diesels are nicer to drive and smoother.
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I'm on my second JSW TDI. The first was a 2009 that I sold privately in 2012. At the time of that sale it had 47k on it. The resale on the TDI's is stellar and the delta between my purchase price and selling was ~ $3.5K. At the time of sale I looked at the selling prices of the gasser JSW and cars with equivalent miles were selling for substantially less (like $3k - 5K less). The comment above about the weak resale on the gassers is 100% correct.
Over the course of those 47k miles I averaged 43mpg. That is a hand calculated/verified mpg number. Fuel cost was ~ $.08 a mile. This is real data, based on experience. It was a no-brainer to re-up and purchase the 2012. BTW - ZERO problems with the car(s). Observation: Whenever I see someone ask a question like this - a high-post-count forum veteran will immediately post up some fundamentally flawed, secondary school level math. Resale is never considered and the real, "true cost" of a gallon of fuel is never even thought of... |
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Doesn't seem like a great return. |
If all you're looking at is the fuel costs, then yes. I do agree with "cheeky boy" that resale value at the time of expected sale should also be a factor. But it is not a one for one situation, since there is also a time value of money.
My prime reason for going diesel is explained above. I'm not doing it for the MPG. |
Resale makes sense to add to the equation. Is diesel off the table for the new gasoline formulas? (ethanol, etc.)
Of course he could NPV (Net present value) that resale into the formula and that would account for the time value of money. |
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Diesel was actually trying to make his engine run on powdered coal! Quote:
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I've never read anything complimentary of the 5 cyl 2.5 unit... kinda noisy, rough, not particularly powerful or economical... On the Tdi side I just sold my 2012 Golf diesel. Mileage was impressive. Torque was nice... But after 6 months I was losing the will to live, and yes, there are fuel pump issues... Personally if it's a primary driver, I'd get the 2.0 Turbo, i.e neither of the above. That's chippable to ungoldly amounts of torque, it's decent on gas and no more expensive than the diesel. The diesel was like paddle shifters to me. Fun for a few days, then when the novelty wears off, you're stuck with a diesel car that understeers like a snow plow, shoes than smell of diesel fuel, and it's not all that "fun" to drive with a 4500 rpm redline (I could remember wrong)...
Then again I met a guy at VW service once, who was getting reimbursed for miles and drove 60K a year. He said his jetta Tdi had paid for itself twice over... If your commute is not crazy, consider the 2.0T. |
2.0T is not available for the Sportwagen.
Only the 2.5 Gasser and 2.0 TDI. |
I've rented the TDI a few times in Europe. Dollars and cents aside, the Turbo diesel is pretty addictive. That's the I'd go if I was gonna keep it for at least 200,000 miles.......
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re the OP: - you need to drive them both over the same road - do it back to back wind out both motors; tests both for mid-range torque; passing from 50 to 70 mph, also |
Have owned a TDI DSG JSW since new in '09. Really nice car. Thought I read VW is dumping the 2.5L 5cyl. in Jettas starting 2014 with a re-design then as well.
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