Automobile Enthusiasts
Related: About this forum'Volkswagen's Component Locking Makes Home Repairs Too Expensive To Be Feasible'
"Fixing your own car, whether induced by economic necessity or tinkerer joy, has been an incredible part of individual vehicle ownership for over 100 years. If your radio crapped out you could usually call up the local junkyard and get one for a fraction of the price of what those crooks down at the stealership want for a new one, and even better, you could install it yourself and save the cost of labor. Or if you couldn't do it yourself, at least you could work with an independent garage with lower labor rates. Volkswagen's got a software fix to lock you, your car, and your wallet into a dealer repair."
"Volkswagen Group's 'Component Protection' system requires a $300-$500 ransom fee for salvage part installation, even if you do the work yourself. Any electronic component in the vehicle, from the infotainment system or switchgear to the gauge cluster or steering wheel, is locked to your vehicle's VIN. Even if you (or your preferred indie shop) perfectly replace the component perfectly with a used item, it simply won't work without that VIN being unlocked by server authentication."
"Every used component install on the vehicle requires a dealership's ODIS system to contact Volkswagen's GEKO server in order to be unlocked, reports Gadget Review. As they so succinctly put it, 'Why pay $400 to activate a $200 part when you could buy new for $600?' Not only does this kill the used parts industry, but it kills the business case for aftermarket component production as well. You're stuck buying new and buying from the dealer. Do you really own your car if Volkswagen can force your hand like this? You aren't allowed to save money on the repair, so unless you want to live without HVAC forever, you'll have to pay the man."
"This is especially problematic for cars once they are past their warranty. The Motor & Equipment Manufacturers Association says that as much as 70% of post-warranty repairs are affected by independent garages. This is a big part of why we need sweeping federal Right To Repair legislation to pass as quickly as possible. Everyone is feeling the economic pinch right now, and at the bare minimum we should be allowed to fix our own stuff when it breaks without having to drop hundreds of extra dollars to get those parts to 'talk' to our cars. Volkswagen is trying to redefine what it means to own your car, hamstringing buyers with ridiculous repair fees."
Continued at link:
https://www.jalopnik.com/2122451/volkswagen-component-locking-home-repair-impossible/
The Wizard
(13,697 posts)for simple comfortable reliable vehicles that go to and from destinations without breaking the bank .
DBoon
(24,926 posts)
VMA131Marine
(5,261 posts)a part that you need. Then you have to get used, reconditioned, remanufactured, or aftermarket parts to keep your vehicle going.
My guess is that this will tank the value of VWs with VIN locking that are out of warranty because of the expense to repair them.