Stop Sale?
#62
At least 10 458s caught fire in their first year due to a wheel arch adhesive issue, which required a simple fix. In this case the fix will be simple too most likely. This is part of the sports car ownership experience. Must be the heat that 9000 rpms generate.
For those with cars already, it means a recall. If your options list is not perfect, drive it hard, if it catches fire you'll get another shot with a new car complimentary from porsche.
For those with cars already, it means a recall. If your options list is not perfect, drive it hard, if it catches fire you'll get another shot with a new car complimentary from porsche.
#63
This all begs the question... Why is this happening to GT3's in Europe, but not in the US? I'm sure if it was happening here, we would have heard about it by now... It's apparently happening quite frequently now in Europe, but has yet to happen here... Hmmm...
#64
The plot thickens...
#66
Rennlist Member
I wonder if there is any correlation between the "oil cooler support bracket" mentioned by pietrostone and the WE09 campaign item "Fastening screws for oil-water heat exchanger" that someone on RL had done on his car.
#68
Race Director
Just speculating here, but I wonder if all the issues have been in Europe because cars were delivered there first and therefore either a) were earlier in the production run or b) in general have more miles on them. You'd think (hope?) that if Porsche really thought that there was a fire danger for US customers there'd be an immediate recall or notification.
#69
Just speculating here, but I wonder if all the issues have been in Europe because cars were delivered there first and therefore either a) were earlier in the production run or b) in general have more miles on them. You'd think (hope?) that if Porsche really thought that there was a fire danger for US customers there'd be an immediate recall or notification.
This is going to be interesting...
#70
Rennlist Member
Although that would make perfectly good sense, one of the posters mentioned that it had happened to a car in Italy that had only 60 kilometers on the odometer... Assuming this is indeed true, it would seem to render your hypothesis as incorrect...
This is going to be interesting...
This is going to be interesting...
if Porsche decides they cannot then we are all in for a long wait to take delivery and drive our cars.
#72
Rennlist Member
Many issues are taken care of during the PDI at the ports of delivery. If I were a dealer, I would much rather have any holds on cars take place at the ports since the dealer gets invoiced for the car when but not until it leaves the port.
#73
Rennlist Member
BTW, since Porsche is trying to determine whether the dealer can repair does that not imply a major problem with the car?
#74
@Nick--I think Pietro's post was intended to say that he's just not sure. He mentioned that an engineer was there just today...Perhaps he will have more info soon...
That's likely why he shared the email of the GM of that dealership--so we can email for the full story and details. Although I kind of doubt that the GM will reply.
That's likely why he shared the email of the GM of that dealership--so we can email for the full story and details. Although I kind of doubt that the GM will reply.
#75
Race Director
Although that would make perfectly good sense, one of the posters mentioned that it had happened to a car in Italy that had only 60 kilometers on the odometer... Assuming this is indeed true, it would seem to render your hypothesis as incorrect...
This is going to be interesting...
This is going to be interesting...
On a related note, there is no evidence that suggests this problem can't be fixed by a dealer or in port. The fact that cars are being held doesn't imply anything one way or another, it just means that there's no reason to continue to deliver cars with a known or possible defect. It doesn't necessarily mean cars are going to hauled back to the factory to be repaired or that Porsche is uncertain of how to handle this.
Or maybe it does. We just don't know.....