Volkswagen to Recall 11 Million Vehicles for Diesel Fix

By Andreas Cremer | September 29, 2015

  • September 29, 2015 at 1:41 pm
    glen kerslake says:
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    My only question is if VW did this software manipulation how may other auto makers have or are doing the same thing?? with Diesel or gas engines

  • September 29, 2015 at 2:00 pm
    reality bites says:
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    Recall all these cars? And do what to them; get new software so that they don’t lie about their emissions, or does the recall make them perform the way they were supposed to from the beginning (which I think is impossible, otherwise why wouldn’t VW have done the patch much earlier)??

    • September 29, 2015 at 2:02 pm
      Agent says:
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      reality, perhaps they should remove all the diesel engines and replace with clean burning gasoline engines.

      • September 29, 2015 at 2:12 pm
        Rosenblatt says:
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        Agent – when you say clean burning gasoline engines, do you mean the cars would use clean-burning gasoline with regular gas engines, or that the engines themselves will be what’s known as lean-burning engines?

        • September 30, 2015 at 1:02 pm
          Agent says:
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          What a question Rosenblatt. How about clean burning gasoline with catalytic converters which emit only a fraction of pollution of pre-catalytic converter cars. I doubt seriously that a diesel could ever be as clean as a gasoline engine since the fuel itself is nasty. By the way, you have to change the oil filters and oil much more frequently than gasoline powered vehicles. I know, because I owned one and not again.

          • September 30, 2015 at 2:24 pm
            Rosenblatt says:
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            Thank you for your answer, Agent.

    • September 29, 2015 at 2:10 pm
      Rosenblatt says:
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      I would venture a guess that if they upgraded the software and had the vehicles run “normal” and test “normal” they wouldn’t pass inspection. That said, I’d imagine VW will upgrade the software so the cars operate as they are currently tested (with lower emissions & lower horsepower being produced).

    • September 30, 2015 at 3:37 pm
      SWFL Agent says:
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      Yes, Reality, then another round of lawsuits when performance & gas mileage is negatively impacted from the software fix. This may never end for VW.

  • September 29, 2015 at 2:04 pm
    reality bites says:
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    should? perhaps. will? highly unlikely…

  • September 29, 2015 at 4:01 pm
    Original Bob says:
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    So I should buy a gas engine that burns more gallons of gas to go the same distance, last for 150,000 to 200,000 thousand miles, and then is disposed of it in a landfill? Are these better for the environment than a 45 miles to the gallon diesel that last 500,000 miles? Company ethics aside, I would buy an unmodified VW diesel in a heartbeat. Once recalled and they are “fixed” the mpg will plummet. These are great cars that just do not meet government standards. The mpg on my 2007 Dodge with the diesel particulate filter (to meet government regulations) went into the toilet along with the resale value – but they were safer as the filters would plug up keeping the trucks in the driveways.



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