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| I'm with Bill Join Date: Jun 2005 Location: Scottsville Va 
					Posts: 24,186
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			Go to the local dealership and ask the service dept, both writers and techs if they would own one out of warranty, I can already tell you the answer is no.  My personal opinion will not be added here 
				__________________ Electrical problems on a pick-up will do that to a guy- 1990C4S | ||
|  09-01-2014, 06:22 AM | 
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| Retired, finally | 
			Horror stories have kept me away from Audi as well. The most reliable car I have ever owned is my 2006 Acura RSX Type-S. 130000 miles with only routine maintenance. Oh, it does eat headlight bulbs on a regular basis, but I think that is more of a function of me driving it to and from work in the dark all the time. I had a 2008 BMW 335xi that was "needy". It wasn't happy unless it had a dealership appointment every 2 months. 
				__________________ 2009 Porsche Cayenne Turbo S; 2019 Corvette Grand Sport Coupe; 1998 Porsche Boxster; 1989 Toyota Supra ChumpCar; 1989 Alfa Romeo Spider; 1977 Porsche 911S Targa 3.2L"Bwunhilde II" chimera; 1970 Datsun 240Z 2.9L "dogZilla" project | ||
|  09-01-2014, 06:28 AM | 
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| D idn't E arn I t | 
			Audi- nope. Well, maybe before it starts needing things..... rjp 
				__________________ AOC/Hogg 2028 | ||
|  09-01-2014, 07:07 AM | 
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| Still Doin Time Join Date: Nov 2004 Location: Nokesville, Va. 
					Posts: 8,225
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			Funny thing about this thread is I recently needed to sell my beloved 540I sport 6-speed because of switching position's within the county government I work for. I need something that has all-wheel-drive as I am now under the heading "Essential Employee"  - I have to be there regardless    I decided to replace it; another BMW, but with all-wheel-drive. I wanted to do 3-series XI. But there are few and far between where I live in the condition and price range needed. So decided I would go and look at a 1-owner 2005.5 Audi A4, AWD - 2.0 turbo with 98K on the clock. I could tell immediately that the car was as stated - really a 9.5 out of 10 on every level............................................. .......except when I take a test drive and get back and open the hood and hear the dreaded 'Diesel' sound indicating worn camshaft / high pressure fuel pressure fuel pump. I passed............ Ultimately, I found a '07 328XI that needed some love for waaaay under market and that is what I bought 
				__________________ '15 Dodge - 'Dango R/T Hauls groceries and Kinda Hauls *ss '07 Jeep SRT-8 - Hauls groceries and Hauls *ss Sold '85 Guards Red Targa - Almost finished after 17 years '95 Road King w/117ci - No time to ride, see above '77 Sportster Pro-Street Drag Bike w/93ci - Sold | ||
|  09-01-2014, 07:31 AM | 
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| D idn't E arn I t | Quote: 
 Beautiful- I ain't sellin mine, not now. Does everything a modern car does-except nag you about seat belts, and no car payments   You can work on a BMW......That Audi is a packaging nightmare. rjp 
				__________________ AOC/Hogg 2028 | ||
|  09-01-2014, 07:47 AM | 
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| Registered | 
			I'm on my second Lexus IS300. Have put a combined 180,000 miles on my former 01 and current 05. My only repairs have been 1 set of brake pad/rotors, a couple batteries, a lot of tires and fluid changes. Non-garaged, minimal maintenance and never had a single breakdown or defect in these cars in 5 yrs of ownership. They are amazing appliances. I put 35k mi/year on my cars due to my job and would never consider a German or American car capable of this level of durability.  I believe that for ultimate reliability, appliances like Toyota/Lexus/Honda/Acura are still the best.  That said, if I only put 10k mi/yr on my car, I'd rather drive a BMW or Audi. | ||
|  09-01-2014, 07:51 AM | 
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| Registered Join Date: Oct 2001 Location: Charlottesville,VA 
					Posts: 322
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			Just bought a 2002 A4 in May and have really enjoyed it for 5000 miles now. Just did my first oil change. The guy who had it before me was very audi-savy, and had addressed all the known A4 issues. I think the trick is to educate yourself on the shortcomings of these cars (and there are many), and find one that has been properly maintained. I looked at hundreds of A4s online before finding one that had been well taken care of by someone who was smart. For $5500 I got an A4 quattro that has the APR stage I mods and a new stainless exhaust. It is an absolute hoot to drive. I don't doubt that I'll be spending weekends under the hood, but it's so much fun to drive.
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|  09-01-2014, 08:07 AM | 
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| Registered | 
			So the take home lesson is that many here want to buy used (and cheap) but want rock-solid reliability, and when things do break, want to fix it themselves. In that case, Honyota is certainly for you. Most of the Japanese cars still don't have an aesthetic on the interior that I like, and with a few exceptions, are not entertaining to drive. But if you want an appliance, then you buy an appliance. Just depends on how what kind of wheel you want to spend your time behind... | ||
|  09-01-2014, 08:31 AM | 
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| Registered | Quote: 
 I find it entertaining that on a Porsche board guys are whining about repair frequency/costs and waxing fondly about their hundreds of thousands of miles in the automotive equivalent of a well made blender. I can make more money, I can't make more time. I'm going to spend that time behind the wheel in something that I find fun and functional - and preferably those both go together. | ||
|  09-01-2014, 08:36 AM | 
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| Retired, finally | Quote: 
 Then, we need a backup to the DD, for the rare times that the DD has to spend the night in the Acura dealership (who I find to be rather reasonable in their charges), such as for it's 110,000 mile service. The BDD should be at least semi-reliable and provide a change of pace to driving the DD. That's my 1999 M3: still has A/C, is fun to drive, minimal electronics to go tits up. Then, we need a track car. Something simple enough that even a chimp can wrench on it, agile, entertaining, with minimal to non-existent creature comforts. Yet, can be used as a backup to the BDD if necessary. My TC is my 911. Then, we need a race car, because just putting laps down at a HPDE gets old after a while. In my case, I don't have much money, so I race Chump Car. I should have bought a E30 like everybody else, but, no, I had to be different, so I bought a Mk3 Supra. I still can't believe I could have been that stupid. Finally, we need a project car. Something that we can work on in our spare time or after we retire and we're too old to go racing anymore. Mine is a 1973 914, that may or may not ever run again. But it's the therapeutic process of creation of something from nothing (or in the rust bucket 914 case, less than nothing) that provides the motivation and satisfaction. And that is why each of us needs at least 5 cars. 
				__________________ 2009 Porsche Cayenne Turbo S; 2019 Corvette Grand Sport Coupe; 1998 Porsche Boxster; 1989 Toyota Supra ChumpCar; 1989 Alfa Romeo Spider; 1977 Porsche 911S Targa 3.2L"Bwunhilde II" chimera; 1970 Datsun 240Z 2.9L "dogZilla" project | ||
|  09-01-2014, 08:50 AM | 
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| Registered Join Date: Apr 2005 Location: outta here 
					Posts: 53,712
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 There are no cars that are completely reliable. None. I'd even hesitate to say that Japanese cars are always better than German cars. The Japanese have made some pretty embarassing ****-ups. The average guy doesn't hear about too much of it. These anecdotal threads are pretty worthless. I really hate to hear opinions from people that have owned one example of something, or none at all. Really useful. I'd like to own a car that never breaks. Or a house that never needs anything. Or a TV that lasts forever. Or a wife that always agrees with me. Since none of that will ever happen, I surround myself with things that I like and I deal with the **** that comes up. Every day. I'm like you. I've never been happy with a Japanese car. Yeah they get you from point A to B but they are just transportation. They have no soul, they don't feel good when you drive them. Hondas feel like tin cans to me, now. I'm a car guy. Life's too short to waste on sensible, efficient appliances. JR | ||
|  09-01-2014, 08:53 AM | 
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| Registered | Quote: 
 Guy | ||
|  09-01-2014, 08:54 AM | 
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| Registered Join Date: Jan 2004 Location: Docking Bay 94 
					Posts: 7,036
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				__________________ Kurt | ||
|  09-01-2014, 09:00 AM | 
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| D idn't E arn I t | Quote: 
 My next transportation appliance is likely Japanese... Lexus. rjp 
				__________________ AOC/Hogg 2028 | ||
|  09-01-2014, 09:26 AM | 
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| Registered | 
			Now take my Boxster engine pleeeze..... For all you engineers and mechanics out there do you ever think why is this engine so complicated? Okay you got your air quality so you got to have an AOS. How many sets of chains? And the two sets of chains have to be within a certain tolerance. Camshaft deviation tolerance etc. Water pump condition? If old gotta replace that in case it explodes into a thousand fragments. While in there replace the coolant reservoir coz it is old. While in there you gotta replace the IMS to prevent the engine grenading. And while in there gotta replace the RMS and the clutch and don't forget the flywheel condition. I crave the simplicity of the old VW bug engine. When did Porsche start to go sideways with their cars? If a person added up all the replacements then it is not a far stretch to say to heck with it and spring for a new Porsche! 3 years of extreme fun. There is no substitute!? Okay I am on vacatiion from anything German. 2 months not driving the Boxster and I am not missing it yet. G | ||
|  09-01-2014, 09:42 AM | 
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| D idn't E arn I t | 
			I'm seriously thinking mid 90's Accord coupe.  Whole long block if it goes kablooey $1.5K- drive for hundreds of thousands of miles.  Excellent gas mileage and reliability.  Fix it for pennies and anyone can do it, can't worry about that car- dings, whatever who cares?  Fix it and move on. For a driver, you can't beat that deal. rjp 
				__________________ AOC/Hogg 2028 | ||
|  09-01-2014, 09:46 AM | 
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| Registered | Quote: 
 We hold onto notions of the way things are supposed to be often for far longer than we should. Not all progress is in fact progress, but there are times that we just don't like change because it is different. I still love my X1 (though you won't like the cupholders  ), but I don't boonie bash in it. That said, if the i3 experiment goes well, I could see swapping the X1 for the i3. You only get to drive so many cars in your life... | ||
|  09-01-2014, 09:47 AM | 
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| Retired, finally | Quote: 
 (and the whole post was meant to be somewhat satirical anyway, as in: I don't really need 5 cars) 
				__________________ 2009 Porsche Cayenne Turbo S; 2019 Corvette Grand Sport Coupe; 1998 Porsche Boxster; 1989 Toyota Supra ChumpCar; 1989 Alfa Romeo Spider; 1977 Porsche 911S Targa 3.2L"Bwunhilde II" chimera; 1970 Datsun 240Z 2.9L "dogZilla" project Last edited by SiberianDVM; 09-01-2014 at 12:03 PM.. | ||
|  09-01-2014, 09:48 AM | 
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| Registered Join Date: Aug 2002 Location: MD 
					Posts: 5,733
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|  09-01-2014, 09:58 AM | 
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| D idn't E arn I t | Quote: 
 SOLD. I'm seriously considering it, but I have too many cars as-is. They are just sit here. Ain't sellin the 540, probably keep it. But the allure of a hassle-free car is really tempting. You can buy an Accordion anywhere in the hood for nothing, and rehab on the cheap. Instant daily driver... rjp 
				__________________ AOC/Hogg 2028 | ||
|  09-01-2014, 10:01 AM | 
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