991 GT2RS
#7351
Off topic, but wanted to see what people would do. I took my 991.1 GT3RS in for a check engine light. Turned out to be a thermostat that wasn't fully opening. Not a big issue. Took the dealer 39 days to fix the problem. They first replaced the thermostat and then, after further consultation with Porsche technical, replaced the thermostat housing, various seals and the temperature sensor. This all takes 39 days. I went to pick up the car today and learned that during this time, they put roughly 200 miles on the car. I immediately squawked at the mileage (the car only had 2700 miles when I dropped it off) and they said that is what it took to diagnose, test, etc.
Am I right to be upset? I talked to the service director and he assured me no joyrides and that they keep mileage documentation along the way while it is in service. I asked him for those records. He said he couldn't immediately give them to me, but that he could have them pulled (seemed like a convenient answer if you were going to create some documentation that goes along with your story). He also offered me "some compensation" for the trouble. I didn't ask what that was and said that we should examine his records first. I thought it was odd that he immediately jumped to compensation for no apparent issue.
My guess is that he or the GM or some other manager took the car home as their driver a few times while it was there for 39 days. If that's true, then they're never going to fess up to anything.
Suggestions? Am I nuts? Should I just go directly to Porsche NA on this?
Am I right to be upset? I talked to the service director and he assured me no joyrides and that they keep mileage documentation along the way while it is in service. I asked him for those records. He said he couldn't immediately give them to me, but that he could have them pulled (seemed like a convenient answer if you were going to create some documentation that goes along with your story). He also offered me "some compensation" for the trouble. I didn't ask what that was and said that we should examine his records first. I thought it was odd that he immediately jumped to compensation for no apparent issue.
My guess is that he or the GM or some other manager took the car home as their driver a few times while it was there for 39 days. If that's true, then they're never going to fess up to anything.
Suggestions? Am I nuts? Should I just go directly to Porsche NA on this?
#7352
I would ask for dated documentation, including parts ordered, the tech has very detailed actions that must go in the computer especially warranty work. If nothing else Porsche would want to know all details. The fact that they offered you "compensation" real quick is very telling. I have heard of new engine swaps in 2 weeks or so. I had a Mercedes dealer put 200 miles on my car over a weekend and they got to keep the car. Somewhere they are lying.
#7353
I would ask for dated documentation, including parts ordered, the tech has very detailed actions that must go in the computer especially warranty work. If nothing else Porsche would want to know all details. The fact that they offered you "compensation" real quick is very telling. I have heard of new engine swaps in 2 weeks or so. I had a Mercedes dealer put 200 miles on my car over a weekend and they got to keep the car. Somewhere they are lying.
#7354
Off topic, but wanted to see what people would do. I took my 991.1 GT3RS in for a check engine light. Turned out to be a thermostat that wasn't fully opening. Not a big issue. Took the dealer 39 days to fix the problem. They first replaced the thermostat and then, after further consultation with Porsche technical, replaced the thermostat housing, various seals and the temperature sensor. This all takes 39 days. I went to pick up the car today and learned that during this time, they put roughly 200 miles on the car. I immediately squawked at the mileage (the car only had 2700 miles when I dropped it off) and they said that is what it took to diagnose, test, etc.
Am I right to be upset? I talked to the service director and he assured me no joyrides and that they keep mileage documentation along the way while it is in service. I asked him for those records. He said he couldn't immediately give them to me, but that he could have them pulled (seemed like a convenient answer if you were going to create some documentation that goes along with your story). He also offered me "some compensation" for the trouble. I didn't ask what that was and said that we should examine his records first. I thought it was odd that he immediately jumped to compensation for no apparent issue.
My guess is that he or the GM or some other manager took the car home as their driver a few times while it was there for 39 days. If that's true, then they're never going to fess up to anything.
Suggestions? Am I nuts? Should I just go directly to Porsche NA on this?
Am I right to be upset? I talked to the service director and he assured me no joyrides and that they keep mileage documentation along the way while it is in service. I asked him for those records. He said he couldn't immediately give them to me, but that he could have them pulled (seemed like a convenient answer if you were going to create some documentation that goes along with your story). He also offered me "some compensation" for the trouble. I didn't ask what that was and said that we should examine his records first. I thought it was odd that he immediately jumped to compensation for no apparent issue.
My guess is that he or the GM or some other manager took the car home as their driver a few times while it was there for 39 days. If that's true, then they're never going to fess up to anything.
Suggestions? Am I nuts? Should I just go directly to Porsche NA on this?
#7355
Rennlist Member
Off topic, but wanted to see what people would do. I took my 991.1 GT3RS in for a check engine light. Turned out to be a thermostat that wasn't fully opening. Not a big issue. Took the dealer 39 days to fix the problem. They first replaced the thermostat and then, after further consultation with Porsche technical, replaced the thermostat housing, various seals and the temperature sensor. This all takes 39 days. I went to pick up the car today and learned that during this time, they put roughly 200 miles on the car. I immediately squawked at the mileage (the car only had 2700 miles when I dropped it off) and they said that is what it took to diagnose, test, etc.
Am I right to be upset? I talked to the service director and he assured me no joyrides and that they keep mileage documentation along the way while it is in service. I asked him for those records. He said he couldn't immediately give them to me, but that he could have them pulled (seemed like a convenient answer if you were going to create some documentation that goes along with your story). He also offered me "some compensation" for the trouble. I didn't ask what that was and said that we should examine his records first. I thought it was odd that he immediately jumped to compensation for no apparent issue.
My guess is that he or the GM or some other manager took the car home as their driver a few times while it was there for 39 days. If that's true, then they're never going to fess up to anything.
Suggestions? Am I nuts? Should I just go directly to Porsche NA on this?
Am I right to be upset? I talked to the service director and he assured me no joyrides and that they keep mileage documentation along the way while it is in service. I asked him for those records. He said he couldn't immediately give them to me, but that he could have them pulled (seemed like a convenient answer if you were going to create some documentation that goes along with your story). He also offered me "some compensation" for the trouble. I didn't ask what that was and said that we should examine his records first. I thought it was odd that he immediately jumped to compensation for no apparent issue.
My guess is that he or the GM or some other manager took the car home as their driver a few times while it was there for 39 days. If that's true, then they're never going to fess up to anything.
Suggestions? Am I nuts? Should I just go directly to Porsche NA on this?
Forget about being upset, I'd just Lemon Law the car and they have to buy it back. (Unless you love the car)
#7356
#7357
GT3 player par excellence
Lifetime Rennlist
Member
Lifetime Rennlist
Member
Off topic, but wanted to see what people would do. I took my 991.1 GT3RS in for a check engine light. Turned out to be a thermostat that wasn't fully opening. Not a big issue. Took the dealer 39 days to fix the problem. They first replaced the thermostat and then, after further consultation with Porsche technical, replaced the thermostat housing, various seals and the temperature sensor. This all takes 39 days. I went to pick up the car today and learned that during this time, they put roughly 200 miles on the car. I immediately squawked at the mileage (the car only had 2700 miles when I dropped it off) and they said that is what it took to diagnose, test, etc.
Am I right to be upset? I talked to the service director and he assured me no joyrides and that they keep mileage documentation along the way while it is in service. I asked him for those records. He said he couldn't immediately give them to me, but that he could have them pulled (seemed like a convenient answer if you were going to create some documentation that goes along with your story). He also offered me "some compensation" for the trouble. I didn't ask what that was and said that we should examine his records first. I thought it was odd that he immediately jumped to compensation for no apparent issue.
My guess is that he or the GM or some other manager took the car home as their driver a few times while it was there for 39 days. If that's true, then they're never going to fess up to anything.
Suggestions? Am I nuts? Should I just go directly to Porsche NA on this?
Am I right to be upset? I talked to the service director and he assured me no joyrides and that they keep mileage documentation along the way while it is in service. I asked him for those records. He said he couldn't immediately give them to me, but that he could have them pulled (seemed like a convenient answer if you were going to create some documentation that goes along with your story). He also offered me "some compensation" for the trouble. I didn't ask what that was and said that we should examine his records first. I thought it was odd that he immediately jumped to compensation for no apparent issue.
My guess is that he or the GM or some other manager took the car home as their driver a few times while it was there for 39 days. If that's true, then they're never going to fess up to anything.
Suggestions? Am I nuts? Should I just go directly to Porsche NA on this?
this is a know issue since 997
some cars it will happen many many MANY times.
I speak from experience.
trakcar had same issue, but both are on 997
I did have same on 991.1 as well
the PIWIS will show the fault.
you replace themostat and/or valve
there's a procedure as to which to replace first or to do both.
it's like a decision tree
they don't have to drive the car to know.
you can removed the valve and test it.
I know b/c I had like 10x on my cars.
once new part goes on, the first 100 miles it may come right back then they fix again. if you passed 200 miles with no issues. then its likely good
they DO NOT need to test drive.
in fact most of modern car issues need not test drive to figure them out.
and 200 mile?
why not 20,000 miles.
when do they stop?
#7358
Reno Porsche - they're small.
Maybe I should be servicing my cars at Niello?
Appreciate the feedback, mooty.
I've reached out to Porsche corporate via form submission on its website. I have an incoming 2RS in February. I suspect my relationship with this dealer goes to crap over this. I was probably done with them anyway given their recent announcement of ADM on future GT cars. Also, have recently started tracking a Wolf. Driving a racecar seems to be curing that GT car itch, so the 2RS may have been my last anyway.
I'm not sure what an acceptable solution is to this problem. I guess I could start a new thread.
Thanks everyone for chiming in. I'll let this forum return to its regularly scheduled GT2RS programming.
Maybe I should be servicing my cars at Niello?
Appreciate the feedback, mooty.
I've reached out to Porsche corporate via form submission on its website. I have an incoming 2RS in February. I suspect my relationship with this dealer goes to crap over this. I was probably done with them anyway given their recent announcement of ADM on future GT cars. Also, have recently started tracking a Wolf. Driving a racecar seems to be curing that GT car itch, so the 2RS may have been my last anyway.
I'm not sure what an acceptable solution is to this problem. I guess I could start a new thread.
Thanks everyone for chiming in. I'll let this forum return to its regularly scheduled GT2RS programming.
#7359
Rennlist Member
Three years free service in writing, but should have demanded it as you blow up into manager’s face right after you found out. May still work. If he comes back with two, take them. No need to throw a long relationship into crap if this was their first infraction. You can be pissed off and firm about your expectations of acceptable behavior, yet still give them a chance — if you want to. May have been better to work it out with the manager first before going to corporate. Good luck!
#7362
Really?
What a joke. This guy thinks the distilled water tank in the frunk is for coolant. Unbelievable how these unqualified reviewers keep coming out of the woodwork. And, it's also unbelievable that people actually loan their cars to this guy. l love the way he is leaning all over some other guys car as he talks about it. Do people really follow this guys attempts to drive other people's cars? He asks for more volunteers in the beginning. I wonder how many people are lined up to hand over the keys to their prized babies..
#7363
SJW, a Carin' kinda guy
Rennlist Member
Rennlist Member
What a joke. This guy thinks the distilled water tank in the frunk is for coolant. Unbelievable how these unqualified reviewers keep coming out of the woodwork. And, it's also unbelievable that people actually loan their cars to this guy. l love the way he is leaning all over some other guys car as he talks about it. Do people really follow this guys attempts to drive other people's cars? He asks for more volunteers in the beginning. I wonder how many people are lined up to hand over the keys to their prized babies..
#7364
What a joke. This guy thinks the distilled water tank in the frunk is for coolant. Unbelievable how these unqualified reviewers keep coming out of the woodwork. And, it's also unbelievable that people actually loan their cars to this guy. l love the way he is leaning all over some other guys car as he talks about it. Do people really follow this guys attempts to drive other people's cars? He asks for more volunteers in the beginning. I wonder how many people are lined up to hand over the keys to their prized babies..
#7365
My dad just took delivery of his 2RS today at the PEC in ATL. I was surprised to see it came with the mag wheels. It’s going straight to Jean-Claude at Detailed Designs for pint correction, PPF and ceramic coating, then it will make a stop in Chicago over the winter and then head home to Bozeman for the long term. A question I should have asked a while ago as I originally spec’d it for him, has anyone experienced dye transfer from jeans/pants to the alcantara seats? The plan is for the car to be driven, so just want to see if there is a way to be preventative if that’s going to be an issue.
in any event, my dad was sending me pics and texts all day raving about the experience. Apprently Porsche really pulls out all the stops for these deliveries. Here’s a few quick pics. Will take more after it’s detailed etc.
in any event, my dad was sending me pics and texts all day raving about the experience. Apprently Porsche really pulls out all the stops for these deliveries. Here’s a few quick pics. Will take more after it’s detailed etc.