Yes but idiots keep buying them so they keep making them if we quit buying this new junk they will be forced to make better cars if nobody buys your cheap Chinese junk you'll have to build something better
If you see this, I know a guy who deals with Bentleys worked for them for years got a good shot and he’s very good at programming stuff like that in the UK
I own a computer repair shop and EVERYTHING is getting more expensive / harder to fix vs buying a new one. It's a multi-industry problem. Those of us trying to run an honest business keeping things out of landfills and junkyards are facing an impossible task of remaining profitable, and the average consumer is the one that suffers the most. Right to Repair is useless as long as manufacturer's are allowed to price everything with such a high markup that it makes no sense for a shop, or customer, to repair vs buy new. I say this as a Right to Repair advocate who's testified to my state and federal reps. Repair businesses are in a dire situation and I've lost all faith that things will ever change. The EU still has hope, but the US is simply too scared to ever limit how much profit a company can make off of their replacement parts / tools for the greater good of their citizens AND the planet. It sucks.
I own and operate an independent medical device repair business. Yes, by law the manufacturers have to give us access to documentation and the ability to buy parts. Many actually ignore the law and there isn't anything we can do about it. Others price the manuals, parts and especially model specific service tools so high that it makes some things impossible. The price for an alignment jig for a urology laser I work on fairly regularly is many thousands of dollars and it's just a block of injection molded plastic. It's actually cheaper to buy an entire new machine for the price of a single part. Infusion pump charge circuit bad? Baxter wants $2000 for the part and software to program it. A new pump... $2100.
Even the EU is failing, since the markup on repair parts and availability to diagnostic schematics are not regulated. Makes sense for a business to make money on selling replacement parts, instead of letting the aftermarket repair stuff. Eco friendly is a complete bullshit construct from do-good politicians who have no fucking clue about what their legislation acutally does.
I have worked as an auto technician over 35 years(recently retired) and I can say without a doubt that it is so much more difficult to repair a car now more than ever. I worked all those years exclusively for one European brand at new car dealerships only,starting as an apprentice and working my way up to shope foreman the last 15 years or so. Even with all the in-person factory training as well as countless online courses it is becoming close to impossible to accurately diagnose many of the problems in today's modern vehicles due to the complexity and sheer amount of time it takes to do just that. Additionally, it gets to the point of where the time invested to fix the car becomes an astronomical repair bill and just doesn’t make sense anymore. No one wants to spend $3,600 to repair their air conditioning or $2,300 to make their power windows operate because of a wiring harness or computer replacement. How about $12,000 for a transmission or $3,200 so your automatic tailgate opens again? Yes, these are actual repair bills that went through our dealership repair shop. These are not Ferrari/Maserati or Porsche bills. These were for freakin' Volvos! This is why leasing took over. Nobody buys cars really anymore. They just turn them in and get another new one. Most outside repair shops don't have the proper equipment, properly trained technicians and/ or money to invest in either to make it worth their while. This seems to be the same with any industry. A plumber recently wanted over $1,300 to replace a simple leaking valve on my boiler at home. I bought the valve online for $73 and a friend and I installed it in about 40 minutes! We have become an economy of consumers. Companies just want to sell more cars, televisions,dishwashers,cell phones,toasters,etc, etc,etc. Don't fix anything, just throw it away and buy a new one. It's all about quarterly profits and the insatiable quest for ever increasing profit.
Spent 15 years (2000-2015) with VCNA and watched prices skyrocket over that time. It took 'Volvo for Life' to a new level. The SPA platform took reliability to a new low.... lower than P3.
@@DirtyDog995 Yes, and they have continued to get progressively expensive and even more complicated to repair since you've left. I left Volvo around 2021. The hybrids were atrocious! A maze of hoses, wiring and cables. All models since 2016 have constant software issues that have plagued the company ever since.
I've been asking around if there are any good analog vehicle options nowadays, but I guess even if there are mostly analog vehicles still being made, well made ones that are relatively simple to repair, there's also the problem about finding parts, getting certs to align with laws... Maybe I'm asking the wrong questions? Or do you know of any good analog, easy to repair vehicles that exist nowadays?
Talk to module master in Moscow Idaho. I had a brake module for the ABS fail on my Porsche 996. Porsche dealers wanted between 5000 to approximately 7000 for replacement. Module Masters fixed mine for $300.00
Did the module have cpu or memory or software issue ? lol , for the replacement price must contain a top end PC in a brake module right ? Hmm but then 300 ? and thats the good deal ? Suckers , i luv pre computer real cars any day over the high tech garbage . New now stands for soon to be "Never Ever Working" right handicapped high tech scrap crap !
All those corporations will be telling us how concerned about our environment they are. Yet they haven't got a problem to sell us products designed to fail and to not be repairable.
Those are 2 different arguments Saving the environment and failing parts are not rhe same concerns Every one should be concerned and active in saving the environment. To not be is simply stupidity
@@user-fc9iq6le2gThey are connected. Products that can’t be repaired will be replaced. This means more things need to be made and more industry means more resources wasted and more emissions. Manufacturers don’t care about the environment. They care about happy shareholders and will use any tactic to ensure that. Like pretending to care about anything.
Uncle Tony did a video some time back asking the question 'Are we at the end of collectable cars?' One could drag a car of old out of a barn and get it running pretty quick. You are not going to drag a post 2000 car out of a field 30 years from now, toss some cables on it and fire it up.
Not to mention the plastics will be toast and that means most of the car is toast. No sanding or repainting those cheap plastics once time and UV rays have had time to disintegrate a majority of the car.
@@jeffs4690 What? The plastics in cars nowadays are leaps and bounds better than they were 20 or 30 years ago. Look at cars from the early 2000s, they have disintegrated. That's the first thing people as on cars such as a WS6. Back then the polymers in plastics sucked, but they're way better now.
The comment is about cars from the 2000s like starting 24 years ago. Not disagreeing they are better now but still plastic so no metal repair for them like classics of today.@@imrf
What cars is easy to fix today ? TOYOTA ! Whala ! Only buy TOYOTA Easy and cheap to fix if anything go's wrong. ( Oh yea, and stay away from small turbo diesel cars ! )
The modules being locked is totally a right to repair issue! Its not just iPhones and tractors its all electronics and other parts. Support right to repair!!!!
You can not fix them. You can only change out the parts. Some of which are trick parts. That will not work without a dealer computer to activate. For a fee of course. Oh and it is a limited time offer. Oh and the US.gov loves it. Got to make those carbon goals. But they will sell you the part. One that is wrapped with a big pile of new parts wrapped around it. A new title and license plate is extra.
Regarding the Bentley, you should look up Louis Rossman, he's a Hero when it comes to advocating against greedy corporations who literally serial code lock out parts from working until you get to a dealer. He managed to win in court against John Deere if memory serves me right. He's a strong voice against that corporate greed making things unfixable, hiding behind the it's for your own safety lie. He also recently moved to Texas. Would be awesome to see you guys do a cooperative video.
Rossman is a stand up guy, probably about to get booted from YT. I don't see Tyler's mechanics getting along with him as they seem very comfortable overcharging him for new parts instead of repairing the existing ones.
@@Scouter98sometimes buying new is the way to go, even if it’s more then buying used. For example the turn signal auto cancel switch in my accord went bad, and we replaced it with a used one. In a few months the used one had the same issue. A new part straight from Honda would have lasted much longer.
@@EvilTurkeySlices I agree that fixing is 100% the best case senario. From what I understood about the Bently, some tech related parts are serialized meaning that even if you bought it new, you still require to go to the dealership for them to "register" it to your car.
But you can repair it! All you need is a $10k brand specific scan tool that you learned how to use, $15k in parts, another $5k in specialty tools, and a couple weeks off of work! And Just like that you DIY'ed the Alternator.
This is why I hope Aptera gets big. They already have RtR at the forefront of their design. They said they'll even put QRs on the parts that link you to repair videos, they'll send you wire diagrams, body files in case you need to design wraps or the like for it. We need more of that!
You couldn't repair a hybrid vehicle...if the electric side of the driveline failed...or one of 100 computers that allow the electric powertrain to communicate with the gas side.
@@lukewalker1051and that's why I just plain don't like hybrids. I have a petrol car and an EV, but I would never buy a hybrid. Worst of both worlds with added complications and difficulties.
There's a video somewhere here on YT that I saw a few years ago that shocased how cars were recycled in Europe. Most all of the cars shown couldn't have been more than 5-7 years old. They were free of dents, dings, and even their paint jobs shone like new! I'm no tree-hugger, but sending off cars that new to the scrapper and expecting people to buy new ones all the time is the epitome of wastefulness.
@@tempest411 I’ve seen it. The environment isn’t the driver behind this, it’s profit. I look after my vehicles - my van is 24 years old and drives perfectly yet I am penalised with excessive road tax because of its age. Where’s the incentive to not over-consume?
@@mybrilliantlife9476You are quite right. Perfectly good vehicles being scrapped over thermostats and simple ignition problems. Feels like the whole system is in free fall: because it is. There was a reason the Book of the Revelation of Jesus Christ was written.
My wife always asks me why I will work on my 1966 MGB, but not touch our daily drivers and this video captures everything as to why I won't touch a newer vehicle.
Cars are manufactured, like smartphones. They have evolved the technology to pack as much capability into as small a package as possible. They don't want you repairing them. They want you to replace them on a predictable and short buying cycle. They will keep this up until buyers demand better.
Back then they weren't like this even in the 2000s never had issues with most of thoes cars until the last decade now these car companies don't want us keeping cars for 50 years
@@georgeallen7667 Well the goons at the EPA will prohibit you from importing "old skool" vehicles, Lister style diesel engines, equipment, etc, citing their planet saving emission standards.
A prime example of the "throw it away when it's slightly damaged" state of affairs that we have been living in for the last 30-ish years, things are no longer built to last, they are just built to be replaced.
In Dec. 2023, gave my 2003 Ford Focus with 205,000 miles to a relative who uses it daily. I got a 2010 Corolla with 125,000 miles and expect to get another 125,000 miles out of it... at least. My phone got ran over a couple times, long story.
Retired auto mechanic here and I have said for a long time that cars were getting stupid and harder to fix. Recently had a 2019 ford escape with a very fixable transmission issue that nobody wanted to fix, they just wanted to replace at almost $9000. Traded the car that weekend. Oh and car only had 75000 miles. Did not buy another Ford product.
I’ve thought many times of taking one of these heavily electronically burdened vehicles, gutting out the electronics and put in a universal hot rod wiring harness. Swap out the steering column if needed, and put in a crate engine with a carb. Then the outside the car looks the same, but it doesn’t need a computer to turn on the brake light. 🤪
I remember that being done with old Jags where the V12 was so problematic and expensive to replace but people loved the look, coachwork and handling. There were kits developed to swap to chevy small block and transmission.
Not to mention why would Bentley sell the module for $20 dollars. So then the car can be fixed have no other problems and they made 20 dollars off the exchange? They'd go out of business and then there would really be no module
Well, it doesn't hurt them immediately, but it hurts the resale values of these cars down the road. Not all prospective new car buyers consider resale value, but plenty do, and will avoid buying the car. This does eventually hurt the reputation of the brand, and reduces sales. For example, Tesla used to be extremely stringent with supplying spare parts. This made Teslas virtually impossible to repair once out of warranty, except by paying ludicrous money at a Tesla service center. In recent years, they've loosened this policy a lot since resale values tanked, and prospective buyers realized it's not worth buying a $75000 car that will be worth $20000 in just 5 years, and even less if something not covered by warranty breaks.
@@jamesellsworth9673 mainly because any of the ones that get crashed or have significant issues get written off as category B 🤷🏽♂️😂😂they literally don't allow any insurers to do anything all the assessments and decisions are done by themselves ...... And most of the time it is written off as CAT B (not allowed to be put back on the road can only be broken for parts)
I was a service advisor in the 80s. The T tops on GM “A” body car leaked water, whistles when driving when they were NEW!😳 Seems like your Gand Sport is normal !😳
True story: I was a BMW stealership technician... Master certified from '99-'09 When the E65 came out, I remember thinking to myself "these are gonna be completely WORTHLESS in 15-20 years..." It just didn't make sense to me at all
They want to go all-electric because then you will only have the illusion of control. You may push a button to start your vehicle but they can shut you down with the click of a mouse if they want-and there isn’t a thing you can do about it.
@@JD-yx7be Depends on if the vehicle has an ECM. You drive a '67 GMC pickup with a small-block Chevy that has an HEI ignition you can keep rolling...and smile at them as you drive by.
The same problem exists in the military. When I was in in the 80's we could fix the electronic stuff. As time went on it changed to test light, red or green. Card out, new card in and faulty card sent back to the manufacturer for replacement. This has gotten far worse now days, and most Western equipment is not repairable by servicemen in the field.
Russia understood this, keeping things simple as possible. Western equipment is the nice shiny toy that looks great in the showroom but that's about it.
Used airbag modules can never be programmed legitimately, IIRC it's US Law or something like that to prevent cleared accident data. But there are services on ebay that'll read and rewrite the data from the chip, EEPROM or something like that. And reset it for you that way. It probably exists for VW/Audi and usually it's $30 or so.
EEPROM is the time of memory used in the module. They are just charging you 30$ to hook up to the module and run a program on a computer to read/write to it. But it's a needed service and 30$ is quite reasonable when the only other thing to do is buy a 2000$ part.
@@Finny869 Never used one myself but I've done my share of programming. The ebay sellers advertise their services as airbag clearing so I assume that they can write whatever they want to the EEPROM. It's probably worth a shot, I did check and see it advertised for VW/Audi modules.
Thats why as European i'm in love with US cars. EU cars are like this for years, and they are all like this. Premium - budget no difference. I remember first time i saw 2013 dodge charger hemi and i was shocked, car from 2010s i can fix at home with my buddy while drinking beer. Same with pentastar v6 or LS V8 cars.
Lol. And you will be spending most weekends tinkering on it, like some Nurburgring fanboy with his race car. :) But, yes, it CAN be done. The sad part as you mention is when no options exist aside from a new engine or similar.
I hate the way new cars are just covered by a big plastic engine cover. I miss simplicity to an extent. Euro cars seem to be made in a way that makes even a good mechanic pull his hair out.
Hoovie singlehandedly keeping this car wizard guy employed for decades. Not sure why Hoovie doesn't just hire him as his fleet manager and call it a day..
When I left the dealership in 2019 it was for this reason bad labor rates more and more complicated and after 15 years I hung my wrenches up and moved to greener pastures
As an Audi/VW tinkerer, I would suggest to look at Canada. They have better relationships with OEM German suppliers than in the US. I work with a parts dealer in Toronto who has never failed to find me weird parts.
@@jamesmedina2062 as stupid as that may sound, the US market has a special relation with every big manufacturer. But Canada is sometimes in the category "other countries".
Wife's SUV gets damaged in early December. It's not 5 years old. Only took 4+ months to get parts, damage repaired, and painted. Then had to return due to sh!t work....I told the regional manager, "You know it's easier to get parts for my '76 Valiant sedan & easier to fix."
Not only that, Ford didn't even have the parts necessary to repair their last major recall (engine fires), had a waiting time of "indefinite" and recommended you just park outside and away from buildings while waiting. It took 8 months.
So many talk about this these days but I was hearing the same stuff 20 years ago. People who are of more modest financial means buy a used luxury car thinking they will get a cool car for a bargain and then they go to the parts store and have a heart attack. With these luxury cars just because they get older doesn't make them cheaper to fix. I mean look at what Jay Leno pays to keep his old cars running. I think what will change is peoples mindset of buying a car more for what it is rather than the bargain price tag. If they need just a daily driver than there are plenty of affordable options. I would never buy any of these cars expecting them to be cheap to fix. Ever.
I like the way The Wizard runs his shop, like a NAVY ship Captain. No Bull,No excuses. And he is a happier camper for the efforts to not take jobs that cost him time,which costs money. I would do things exactly the same if i could start over new.(Im too old now,Retired and not going back to the dirt and grease.But i do love the job.)
@@ryanpangle The car ninja tried several times and could not get it to work. Something tells me only the dealer can do it but they will not do it to a used part.
That module won't work, same part number but different parameters. The one he's looking for is 3D0-909-601-E /00P. A quick search and I found a company that can repair and reset the original for $60. That's what most recommended anyway. Since the modules are typically programmed to the vin.
I've been involved with the auto industry since 1974. I earned 3 Honda/Acura Masters Certs. 1 Toyota Master. 1 Chrysler 1 Jeep and 2 GM master Cert. Emission Instructor-retired, A Tire Certifcation Instructor. I am presently retired and own 2 late model Jeeps. For each I purchased service manuals and tech series updates. To Service or check I purchased a late model Diagnostic Scanner. Even now, I have to get in touch with a Local Jeep Dealer as only the manufacturer has the best information. Vehicles change so quickly that even dealers are stomped by Quirks that appear. I grew up owning a 1970 Duster that was simple to repair. When my wife bought a new Chevrolet Camero and had problems not starting, scanner showed computer model problems. Bought a new Computer and nothing. After hours and hours it ended up being a defective Key chip!! I spoke to a Tech at Land Rover and he said new vehicles can have 20-30 computers. Glad I'm retired!! Yanni
@@safffff1000 I guess because when I got drafted in 1969 and spent 8 years as a Military Police drove Jeeps 24/7. When I got out a bought my first Jeep. Guess I was stuck on Jeeps since! Yanni
As such a thoroughly qualified and educated master mechanic - obviously a “car guy” - it boggles the mind as to why out of so many amazing and interesting cars from the past 70 years of automotive innovation you chose to own a modern Jeep. I suppose I could better understand if it were a ‘80’s-something CJ or something else simple and bulletproof, but a modern Jeep? I’m hoping it’s a Trackhawk or the Hemi-equipped or electric Wrangler… I remember from my days working at a car auction Jeeps - especially modern Wranglers - were the most absolutely terrible driving things on 4 wheels. And God help you if it had all-terrain tires on it - uncomfortable, loud, and the interior materials were awful. They say “It’s a Jeep thing, you wouldn’t understand.” They’re exactly right. I will never understand!
Until recently I had three cars in the household. . 15 years old 22 and 52. I love that there are people who can service these... though was tough finding a good Jaguar mechanic for the 2008. Anyway I just sold it and bought a 2020 Mercedes E450 wagon. You bet I'm going to buy the extended warranty.
Two of the best cars I ever owned were a 1975 Buick Riviera and a 1979 Ford Thunderbird, and I didn't even get them until they were over twenty years old with over 200k miles on them already. They were built like tanks back then.
I’m not saying this is easy, or smart, but I think the way forward with cars like these is repairing the module. Circuit boards only have so many things that can go wrong. If it’s not physically broken, it’s usually the capacitors which could be considered wear items. If you replace all the capacitors on an old board, it will work more times than not. Maybe we all just need to get better at diagnosing and servicing circuit boards.
Yeah true. I didn't want to pay for a window lift switch. We did figure out that it was corrosion on the contact surface in the switch. Cleaner didn't work but a fine sandpaper did the trick to clean the contact surface.
Might be possible for passive components, but anything requiring programming might be more difficult. But I agree I can expect more shops offering such a service to be used by mechanics.
Sold my BMWs, sold my Jeep, sold the wife’s SUV. We both drive older now. No car payments and two classic cars that are cheap to fix and run forever. We updat them with modern suspensions and engine swaps that are aftermarket supported. Mine a 79 Malibu, hers a 94 2 Door Yukon. And couldn’t be happier
You have a good wife, most have to have something new and shinny to impress everyone that they're successfully in debt 😂 I am a mechanic and drive vehicles from as far back as 1998. Old is gold.
@@melissasmess2773this is one of the many reasons why the mother of my children is my ex. Rack up debt to have something shiny. Even my sons as adults see this.
I’ve done similarly and now have a 1987 XJ6 (Series 3) and a 2004 LS430. The LS has a ton going on electronically, but it all works flawlessly and has twenty years of good history behind it. The XJ6 is very mechanical and only has two noticeable computing devices; the ECM in the trunk (smartly away from the engine heat), and the dash trip computer. Both have rock solid engines, and they both draw praise everywhere I drive them.
@@colchronic , often even the dealers have trouble to program their own stuff. I have a 2005 A6, which had a steering lock module fail and it took them a whole day for the new part to communicate with the car. Total mess.
I replaced a rear brake light bulb for $6 for a customer. But I couldn't clear the code and get the check light off. Thanks to Chrysler, it now has to go to the dealer and cost $200 to turn off the red light on the dash. And I have fairly new multiple high dollar scanners. Oreillys and every other part store also said they couldn't get the parts for them. Chrysler takes the longest to release the designs to reproduce parts, so it forces you to buy from the dealership. Can/bus systems are causing so many issues making it harder and harder to diag properly. And yes, collector cars are becoming a thing of the past. Collector cars will be stuck in the pre-1970's category. After no more than 20 yrs, you won't be able to by the electronics to fix modern vehicles. Lately, I've taken several modern vehicles to the dealer for diag just to be told they don't know either, more time required to figure it out. It's a lottery draw to know what the cost will be to fix something these day.
It is truly sad when the average new car costs more than a four bedroom house in the San Francisco Bay area 50 years ago. And that's not even factoring in the total cost of ownership
In 1925 a Ford Model T cost $300, and workers at Ford were paid $5 a day. So a worker could buy a Model T on 3 months' wages. Income tax 1.5% for that worker.
I had a 78 Chevy Monza my dad bought cheap with a blown head gasket. Fixed it with liquid glass and drove it for a few years. Never had another problem with it. Eventually totaled it so it ended up where it belonged anyways.
Open deck design is what was a big problem with the engines in Chevy Vegas. The aluminum block didn't have iron liners, so the piston sleeves would vibrate while the engine was running, which would cause the bores to get scuffed, and destroy the head gaskets. The cars were transported from the factory in rail cars stood on their nose, which I think also caused problems with things internally getting damaged by unloaders who didn't follow procedure. Vert-A-Pac it was called.
True Story: My dad's 2016 Ford Fusion Hybrid was acting funny so he asked me if I thought maybe the alternator was bad. I told him I would take a look... I popped the hood and could not find even ONE thing that resembled a car engine or components thereof. Tried checking the running voltage, should be 14+, but I was not allowed to start the engine while the hood was open. I could not FIND an alternator, could not CHECK an alternator, told dad he had to take it to the dealer. And this, being a simple operation that I could do in auto shop in High School... can't do it anymore. Cars are no longer "Horse/Buggy Replacements", they are "Tech Toys" that "generate corporate profits".
I worked in the car sales industry for 5 years and I learned to hate anything from the last 15 years. I’m a professional driver now and drive multiple vehicles with the peace of mind my own 2004 Volvo V70 20T won’t let me down when I get around to driving it occasionally.
It wasn't an issue of finding it, they said they tried multiple used modules but that the computer couldn't program it. So it's likely that they made it to where after it's been programmed to a car that it can't be programmed again to another car to force you to buy a new one and have the dealer program it.
I don't know how it is in the states but in Germany Dealer software for older Cars like VCDS for VAG is easy to get (they somehow find their way out of dealerships). Maybe you could program it with a original VCDS Software.
@@TheCobruhAlienat0r With some VAG cars the modules have serial numbers coded into them and you have to code that serial number into the ECM (or whatever the master unit is) before it will talk to it.
I recall back in 2010 I bought a used 2007 Lincoln Navigator. The Navigator was mint and just a beautiful truck but for some reason The Navigation System was missing it's Disc with the Map's. I went to my local Dealer and they wanted $400 for the Disc with the Maps and I told them no thanks. I checked eBay and found a recent map Disc for $25 and it worked like a Charm! Dealers are such a terrible rip off for anything!
I have a 2016 Ford Focus Titanium. I was trying to update the Sync with USB stick and it just keeps telling me it's out of disk space or something. the dealership I took it to in Texas told me it's $200 for them to update it for me instead. they were apparently shady anyway so I'm glad I don't live there anymore. I don't need album artwork for my mp3s anymore anyway. 🤣
@@mecha2001I realize in your case it’s a 2016 vehicle so a 3rd party radio makes slightly less sense then like a 2000 car, but still I swear 3rd party radios are just simply better in every situation.
@@zacmitchel92 lol it does what I need it to. would've been cool to have Android Auto but I live in Wisconsin now and I can just handle my phone legally the old fashioned way. 😂 cheers dude
@@mecha2001 for sure. Im just saying I’ve experienced manufacturer radios that have Bluetooth and usb and such and just do not see a reason to have them. Have a 3rd party radio cuz I need it compared to the original tape deck. Experiencing both first and third party radios I swear third party works better in every way.
man my kid kicked the back of my seat and the panel came down in a 07 infinity m 35. the dealer charged me $300 for aplastic clip. my buddy worked at Nissan and the same clip was $20. the dealers a just rip u off
I've been running a 2003 Nissan in the UK for the last 8 years. Zero issues. Just routine maintenance at an independent garage. Most reliable car I've ever had. Wouldn't have a brand new car if it came free. Anything post 2009 is rubbish.
Tyler, this is indeed going to be the way with the newer cars. There are many specialists who can repair modules or supply reconditioned ones. This is where the online forums come into their own. RUclips is also another useful platform.
I have four cars, all paid for for many years. All of them are over 100k miles, one is significantly over 200k, and two are close to 200k. They all run great and only the Silverado Z-71 4x4 has reliability issues (dashboard doesn't work half the time and the battery dies after a few days. I have to keep it plugged in all the time). The other three cars are Scions, and were all purchased new. A 2006 xB (toyota), 2013 FR-S (subaru) and 2016 iA (Mazda). All very solid runners. The iA has been all over the US (we live in Kentucky and that car has been to Seattle, Chicago, St Louis, Arizona, south Florida). The xB has 230k miles and is still on the original clutch. I hit a deer at 150k and the front end was creamed pretty good. I have after market (amazon) LED's as my headlights on one side now. It burns no oil and drives "smooth as puddin'" I'll drive it until it leaves me on the side of the road. I'm 70 and over trying to impress people with what I drive. It's why the xB is my favorite. But I do use the FR-S to get to the golf course. 🙂 I've never been into exotic cars, though my friend from High School races Porsches. He's been into them since his 924 he bought in the early 80's. They are fun, but I prefer my six speed FR-S. For starters, I can easily fix it myself, though I had the dealership replace the spark plugs at 140k miles since to do it right you really have to jack up the engine a bit. But it is amazingly fun using Michelin SS4's on the smooth Kentucky twisties all over my rural area. BTW, as I see what's happening with modern cars, I may have purchased my last car. I'll try to keep these four running as long as possible.
Just a thought but given the proximity of the large garage to the pond, consider having rain runoff from the roof directed into the pond. You still have a chance to bury drainage tubes connected to the building downspouts. Might as well collect the water if you can. I would also consider a micro turbine up on that windmill tower with some battery storage to power your fountain and other power needs at the pond.
When the Wizard retires will he be willing to visit and answer questions while you turn the wrench? I used to work at U-Haul a long time ago and my manager at the time broke his ribs. I got to do my first brake controller install. He did stop by for a while, even though he was not back to work yet, in case I had problems. I got it done ok and the vehicle owner was very understanding on the extra time spent (If I remember right not charged for).
That Bentley airbag module is shared with the VW Phaeton and VW Touareg. Gan literally get them for under £10 used in the UK. This sounds like a ‘Mercia problem. Also, not sure how Ninja is trying to program this but in my experience you need ODIS-E and only ODIS-E will do it. Universal scanners just don’t work as reliably.
Yes, it''s at the very least a Phaeton part number. Here in Germany, you can also find people, who will fix or reprogram them. Having someone fix it would also avoid having to Program a new one.
Modern cars need knowledge in modern things. I'm not bashing ninja or wizard, but they are mechanics. They do understand the mechanical side, deeply. But this is another ball game. I heard about a dude, who had problems with his Tesla, had a wreck and major rebuild. Tesla wouldn't either touch it or was asking an arm and a leg, can't remember. The solution was to find a guy in eastern Europe, hook a computer to the car and through remote desktop connection let him code the thing, and be on the phone to press buttons and do what he asks when needed. They got it to work. There are guys, who either can fix a broken ECU etc, or can code one from a wrecked car. But it's not easy, it takes time, dedication and deep understanding.
@SashaGrace94 , you can allso just use Ross-Tech´s VCDS when you need to program VAG modules, but i dont know if they are as avalible in the US as they are for us here in the EU/UK 🙂
Now people know why I am looking for a well maintained 1995-1996 Ford F-150 with the 4.9l inline 6 cylinder engine. It is because it will be on the road long after all the 2010-2024 models are long gone. Most of your older 1996 and older insert brand made great trucks that last a long time and easy to work on. That old Ford Camper Special you purchased awhile back is a keeper Hoovie you should hang on to that one.
You're one of the few smart ones left... First vehicle I ever owned (purchased in 1998) is a 1980 F150 4x4 with the 300 inline 6 and NP435 granny 4 speed, I still own it, it refuses to die. I currently own 8 different Ford trucks from 1980-96, and I've owned about 30 others if you count past projects and parts trucks. Why just limit yourself to '95 and '96 model years? From 1987 to 95 they're all basically the same, they updated the body of the trucks in '92 but mechanically there is very little difference. In '96 they added obd2 which (in my opinion) just added extra sensors and nonsense that makes zero difference on how it runs when it all works, but causes extra headaches when they fail. The 351w is a great engine too. Makes decent torque down low like a 300 but can still scream up higher in the rpms like a 302. In '94 the v8 trucks got roller camshafts, so they're about 25hp more peppy then the older v8 trucks. Other then adding efi in '87 the 300 is basically the same engine in 1996 that it was in 1965.
@@admiralrustyshackleford119 I like Fuel injection and by the 1995-1996 year models Ford had all the bugs ironed out and they were the two best models to buy and the older you go the harder some parts can be to locate even though most componants were the same they had differences. I have not ruled them out though it is just very unlikely I will find one as affordable. 1976-1978 is my favorite body style. I got a pretty good truck now a 2003 GMC Sierra with a 4.8l they are easy to work on and last as well. I just remember my 1992 F-150 and how easy it was to work on and maintain. Plus I have always liked the looks of those trucks.
@@JasPlun True, they had about a decade and a half by 95/96 to work the bugs out. I'm a Ford guy at heart, but I can't stand any of their trucks after 1996 (or '97 for the F250-F350) If I absolutely had to buy a newer truck it'd be one of those 1999-09 GMs with the 4.8 or 5.3. I know they're pretty much unicorns but a regular cab short bed with the 4.8 and a 5 speed would be a cool little truck to have around.
Yup. Hatchbacks are vanishing, or being sold exclusively for 40k+ in insanely marked up hot versions. “You will buy a crossover that’s as difficult to work on as it is ugly and you will love it for exactly 3-5 years before buying another.”
@@piedpiper1172most crossovers are just lifted hatchbacks. You can’t name one hatchback that doesn’t share an engine and transmission with a cross over. Don’t buy 6 cylinder transaxle cars and you should be fine.
@@Klake-bk2dp No, they’re imitation hatchbacks shoved onto light truck frames and into the light truck regulatory category. It’s not just about the engine and transmission. They’re heavier and taller-the two worst possible traits for handling performance and economy, and the increased size further limits max speed. Lifted is exactly the last trait I want in a hatchback lol, there is a reason tuner culture has overwhelmingly lowered hatches for decades (really, in all cases aside from silly safari shenanigans). Plus, they lack crash compatibility with cars. Light trucks are meant to be work vehicles, not the default commuter. Heavier vehicles cost us all huge amounts in increased road wear (anything above 4,000lbs is above the design fatigue limit for most US roads and streets, which is also a way EVs need improvement), increased crash intensity, increased injuries to pedestrians, and increased roll over frequency. They’re bad SUVs, and terrible hatchbacks.
@@piedpiper1172 what light truck frame goes to which crossover? lol, it lowers the max speed? Name one crossover that can’t reach 90 MPH? Your critiques quite literally do not matter to 90% of people buying cars. Also, in this context does it matter? Nobody cares…
@@Klake-bk2dp Your ignorance is showing. Light trucks are a regulatory classification. It’s literally why they’re called cross overs lol. They are made to resemble cars as closely as possible, while “crossing over” into the light truck category. Also, again, weight and height. These reduce efficiency. Manufactures are stretching engines to still hit mpg requirements because of this, and it’s why failure rates are so high. The same drive trains in actual cars would be even more efficient. And the public does care very much about efficiency. The same thing that reduces max speed (drag, cus big), reduces efficiency and acceleration (aka, the two most heavily marketed characteristics of cars). Spend some time looking at the marketing for the Kona N and it’s price point competitors. You’ll see exactly what I mean about marketing making a big deal out of performance and efficiency.
I'm very torn on this. My DIY mechanic instinct totally agrees with you. The crash safety of newer vehicles is a really compelling reason to go newer though.
@@Elloris A lot of car guys like to downplay the safety aspect, but you're right. Drivers are the most distracted they've ever been, they're in the biggest, heaviest, and most powerful vehicles they've ever been in, and there is more traffic volume than there's ever been. It's dangerous on the roads nowadays.
@@Elloris safety is cool, but driving a pile of wires really does suck substantially. Some new cars are incredible to experience additionally, whereas the quality and elegance of the older generations on back really evoke and represent what cars used to mean.
Thats why I drive Mk 4 Jetta TDi's. 1999-2003. Easy to fix modify and comfortable. Cheap parts. 50 mpg and easy to modify with great results. With the right tune, you can have a beautiful driving all around great car.
Luxury cars that dont run but are still comfortable inside....new homes for the homeless of the 2030's. Rent one for $2000 /month. Junk yards will become the new 5 star hotels. Add a food truck or two and you have your own town.
I'm glad to keep my 89 GTA for 25 years now. Technology and everything unfortunately sucks. Everything is getting worse to replace or find new and older
Just wait until all cars become part of the "Internet of Things" and the manufacturers decide your 5-10 year old car needs to be replaced and they send a signal to brick it. Time to buy a new car, who cares if you can't afford it.
All new cars ARE part of the IoT. They track EVERYTHING, and some insurance companies are now raising your insurance because of your driving information which they can purchase from the facility that stores all of it.
@@MH-ev3wr Doesn't matter. ALL my vehicles are pre-2010. Been building a warehouse full of parts for them thru the years before the manufacture decides not to make them. It's like MS ending Windows 10 next year.
Car Wizard, if you were going to rebuild that engine, ANY machine shop worth 4 cents a day would have ran that block through a caustic hot tank washer and gotten EVERY BIT of that junk out of the block.
The problem with that is give your local machine shop a call and see how far they are backed up and then multiply it times 3, that’s when you’ll actually receive your block back lol.
@@TheAnnoyingBoss That depends on the car. If it's an average car I would agree that it's not worth it. But if it's a high performance car that is going to get upgraded forged pistons and rods then its totally worth it as it would be better than a stock new engine. By the way most sporty cars benefit from a healthy aftermarket of high performance parts.
1) 11:25: the engine is not totaled, you can send it to machine shop to resurface 2) the 2000 dollar module, all car today using Can bus (1 wire for signal, 1 wire for ground). It is not encrypted, you can inject your own signal to by pass the controller module. or replace it with manual window controller.
Why does Doug need to be connected to the people? What does that even mean? Watch and enjoy his content or don’t, but saying he’s not connected to the people. 😂
I feel that module. My ABS module for my 2005 A4 B6 Avant Quattro was 1500 from factory, and my Catalytic Converter was shipped from Canada when there was only 7 left in the world at 2500. I FEEL YOU HOOVIE!
Finally you got something right. Said that parts will be a problem, plus the fact that 99% of mechanics simply dont understand computers, the digital world or new technologies! I give these garages, another 3 to 7 years.
6 месяцев назад+10
Financial ruin! Catastrophe! Let's go buy a Cybertruck! I just love to watch your shenanigans Hoovie!
I’d like to see you interview Sreten from M539 Restorations on this. I think he’d have a different viewpoint because he’s experienced problems with modern complicated cars but he’s also accustomed to taking used engines down to bare blocks. I think he’s the only channel that actually takes cars from the bottom of the depreciation curve - that is complicated newish cars out of warranty- and actually does near-concours restorations such that they would be as reliable or more so than the new car
The problem with Streten is that no workshop does things the proper, dedicated way. Those kinds of repairs are not profitable, and require skill and equipment that is not cheap. Of course, 99,9%of the people (even buyers of luxury cars) don't want to pay for even basic maintenance, let alone proper in-depth repairs. Modern cars are crap. Current workshops are crap. But this industry is going the way is going because consumers don't see vehicles like we used to, and are demanding things that inadvertently cause an awful product/service.
@@Biker_Gremling there are shops that rebuild engines and such, there are shops that do more or at a higher level than Sreten (just look at what Larry Chen highlights at SEMA etc). It's just expensive you are right.
Great dose of reality! You don't need a fancy car to have these problems. Try a DIY change on a throttle body for a 2014 Jeep Compass! $$$ once you find the engine needs re-programmed.
That black 1968 Coupe DeVille at the car wizard's is beautiful. One of the best engines, the Cadillac 472 cubic inch and in 1968 actually with a 10:1 compression ratio. TH400 transmission.
Geez. This is why insurance companies just total things out. This is also why I'm more and more about traditional hand works. It might break, but it'll be repairable. And in the mean time it will have some soul
@@catinthehat5140 For tax reasons as value depreciation would be interesting to compare 7 classic cars, don't need to be some rare expensive models, versus a modern car. Many classics have privileges with taxes, especially the ones related with emissions. Since the cars would be driven soft, if well protected against corrosion, you could drive them literally for free for some years. Since they would retain and even increase their value.
@@RogerM88 That said, almost anything since the advent of electronics is a module or a sensor away from being a brick. That's the reason actual classics still keep their value as they are literally bomb-proof and can run long after everything else's chips have fried or corroded away. Simply because the manufacturers make parts only as long as they sell the model. Then it's a matter of diminishing parts supply until there are none. They don't care about keeping old cars running, after all, once the warranty on the last year of that design expires. My own car, at 11 years old already has parts that are not orderable from Ford. None exist anywhere in the country and no more will be made. Thankfully, being a Mustang, I have plenty of aftermarket options. But I am the exception and it's part of WHY I bought the car.
Correct, but if it has Bentley-specific firmware (which is where Jonny seems to be getting stymied),a similar module from another VAG brand isn't likely to work.
To put it simply, modern cars are not designed to be fixed at all, just replaced. As an engineer at one of the big three, I’d love to chat with Tyler about this sometime
This is why I was able to pick up an 2008 Chevy HHR for $500. The shop rate to fix it was twice what the car was worth. I did all the work myself using new and wreaking yard parts and have a pending offer of $3k for it and I will make a nice profit. It was even better because a family member needed a car while theirs was in the body shop (couple months of drama thanks to insurance companies fighting over who pays) so we got a good amount of use out of it before selling it.
Hoovie, watching you grow your channel over the years has been an absolute pleasure. You deserve all of the good things you have and the ones coming to you. To see you happy again is fantastic. Grateful fan🤙🤙
Sorry if someone has already pointed this out but the airbag module at 4:00 is widely available here in Europe, fits quite a few vehicles, cost is around € 150 new, from € 25 used
Get a 60-day free trial at www.shipstation.com/hoovies. Thanks to ShipStation for sponsoring the show!
Yes but idiots keep buying them so they keep making them if we quit buying this new junk they will be forced to make better cars if nobody buys your cheap Chinese junk you'll have to build something better
You should be ordering your used engines from LKQ with warranty
If you see this, I know a guy who deals with Bentleys worked for them for years got a good shot and he’s very good at programming stuff like that in the UK
I can get you the airbag module for the bentley for £24
Hello. Tyler, please, read the email about the Maserati SUV that I’ve sent to you. You can publicly use this information and photos. Thank you.
I own a computer repair shop and EVERYTHING is getting more expensive / harder to fix vs buying a new one. It's a multi-industry problem. Those of us trying to run an honest business keeping things out of landfills and junkyards are facing an impossible task of remaining profitable, and the average consumer is the one that suffers the most. Right to Repair is useless as long as manufacturer's are allowed to price everything with such a high markup that it makes no sense for a shop, or customer, to repair vs buy new. I say this as a Right to Repair advocate who's testified to my state and federal reps. Repair businesses are in a dire situation and I've lost all faith that things will ever change. The EU still has hope, but the US is simply too scared to ever limit how much profit a company can make off of their replacement parts / tools for the greater good of their citizens AND the planet. It sucks.
I own and operate an independent medical device repair business. Yes, by law the manufacturers have to give us access to documentation and the ability to buy parts. Many actually ignore the law and there isn't anything we can do about it. Others price the manuals, parts and especially model specific service tools so high that it makes some things impossible. The price for an alignment jig for a urology laser I work on fairly regularly is many thousands of dollars and it's just a block of injection molded plastic. It's actually cheaper to buy an entire new machine for the price of a single part. Infusion pump charge circuit bad? Baxter wants $2000 for the part and software to program it. A new pump... $2100.
Omg it’s the greatest technician that’s ever lived
Even the EU is failing, since the markup on repair parts and availability to diagnostic schematics are not regulated. Makes sense for a business to make money on selling replacement parts, instead of letting the aftermarket repair stuff. Eco friendly is a complete bullshit construct from do-good politicians who have no fucking clue about what their legislation acutally does.
Its the greatest technician that´s ever lived!
The sad part the single use culture has bled into everything
I have worked as an auto technician over 35 years(recently retired) and I can say without a doubt that it is so much more difficult to repair a car now more than ever. I worked all those years exclusively for one European brand at new car dealerships only,starting as an apprentice and working my way up to shope foreman the last 15 years or so. Even with all the in-person factory training as well as countless online courses it is becoming close to impossible to accurately diagnose many of the problems in today's modern vehicles due to the complexity and sheer amount of time it takes to do just that. Additionally, it gets to the point of where the time invested to fix the car becomes an astronomical repair bill and just doesn’t make sense anymore. No one wants to spend $3,600 to repair their air conditioning or $2,300 to make their power windows operate because of a wiring harness or computer replacement. How about $12,000 for a transmission or $3,200 so your automatic tailgate opens again? Yes, these are actual repair bills that went through our dealership repair shop. These are not Ferrari/Maserati or Porsche bills. These were for freakin' Volvos!
This is why leasing took over. Nobody buys cars really anymore. They just turn them in and get another new one.
Most outside repair shops don't have the proper equipment, properly trained technicians and/ or money to invest in either to make it worth their while.
This seems to be the same with any industry. A plumber recently wanted over $1,300 to replace a simple leaking valve on my boiler at home. I bought the valve online for $73 and a friend and I installed it in about 40 minutes!
We have become an economy of consumers. Companies just want to sell more cars, televisions,dishwashers,cell phones,toasters,etc, etc,etc. Don't fix anything, just throw it away and buy a new one. It's all about quarterly profits and the insatiable quest for ever increasing profit.
Spent 15 years (2000-2015) with VCNA and watched prices skyrocket over that time. It took 'Volvo for Life' to a new level. The SPA platform took reliability to a new low.... lower than P3.
I would never buy or work on german, italian , Swedish cars. Only Japanese. They dont break down as much and much cheaper to fix
You are spot on my friend!
@@DirtyDog995 Yes, and they have continued to get progressively expensive and even more complicated to repair since you've left. I left Volvo around 2021. The hybrids were atrocious! A maze of hoses, wiring and cables. All models since 2016 have constant software issues that have plagued the company ever since.
I've been asking around if there are any good analog vehicle options nowadays, but I guess even if there are mostly analog vehicles still being made, well made ones that are relatively simple to repair, there's also the problem about finding parts, getting certs to align with laws... Maybe I'm asking the wrong questions? Or do you know of any good analog, easy to repair vehicles that exist nowadays?
Talk to module master in Moscow Idaho. I had a brake module for the ABS fail on my Porsche 996. Porsche dealers wanted between 5000 to approximately 7000 for replacement. Module Masters fixed mine for $300.00
Please send info!!!
I have a friend like that here in Detroit and help out on the shops tow truck just to sit and wacth
@@lydellleopold5884are you joking that's the name
Did the module have cpu or memory or software issue ? lol , for the replacement price must contain a top end PC in a brake module right ? Hmm but then 300 ? and thats the good deal ? Suckers , i luv pre computer real cars any day over the high tech garbage . New now stands for soon to be "Never Ever Working" right handicapped high tech scrap crap !
I would sell that 996 before it breaks again
All those corporations will be telling us how concerned about our environment they are. Yet they haven't got a problem to sell us products designed to fail and to not be repairable.
Oh...they're reapirable. Dr. Hans is happy to give you a walletectomy.
Those are 2 different arguments
Saving the environment and failing parts are not rhe same concerns
Every one should be concerned and active in saving the environment. To not be is simply stupidity
@@user-fc9iq6le2gThey are connected.
Products that can’t be repaired will be replaced.
This means more things need to be made and more industry means more resources wasted and more emissions.
Manufacturers don’t care about the environment. They care about happy shareholders and will use any tactic to ensure that. Like pretending to care about anything.
It ultimately does harm the environment more when products and parts are failing and producing more waste@@user-fc9iq6le2g
It’s just a massive grift
Uncle Tony did a video some time back asking the question 'Are we at the end of collectable cars?' One could drag a car of old out of a barn and get it running pretty quick. You are not going to drag a post 2000 car out of a field 30 years from now, toss some cables on it and fire it up.
Not to mention the plastics will be toast and that means most of the car is toast. No sanding or repainting those cheap plastics once time and UV rays have had time to disintegrate a majority of the car.
@@jeffs4690 What? The plastics in cars nowadays are leaps and bounds better than they were 20 or 30 years ago. Look at cars from the early 2000s, they have disintegrated. That's the first thing people as on cars such as a WS6. Back then the polymers in plastics sucked, but they're way better now.
The comment is about cars from the 2000s like starting 24 years ago. Not disagreeing they are better now but still plastic so no metal repair for them like classics of today.@@imrf
@@imrfthis is true i am truly scared to look at my WS6 too hard or it may crack lil
What cars is easy to fix today ? TOYOTA ! Whala ! Only buy TOYOTA Easy and cheap to fix if anything go's wrong. ( Oh yea, and stay away from small turbo diesel cars ! )
The modules being locked is totally a right to repair issue! Its not just iPhones and tractors its all electronics and other parts. Support right to repair!!!!
Ford has been doing this since at least 2009 in their F series, it’s been going on a while
What module are you referring to?@@nathanenns7186
You can not fix them. You can only change out the parts. Some of which are trick parts.
That will not work without a dealer computer to activate. For a fee of course. Oh and it is a limited time offer.
Oh and the US.gov loves it. Got to make those carbon goals.
But they will sell you the part. One that is wrapped with a big pile of new parts wrapped around it. A new title and license plate is extra.
Why do you hate capitalism?
Why should companies allow you to repair their items?
Regarding the Bentley, you should look up Louis Rossman, he's a Hero when it comes to advocating against greedy corporations who literally serial code lock out parts from working until you get to a dealer. He managed to win in court against John Deere if memory serves me right. He's a strong voice against that corporate greed making things unfixable, hiding behind the it's for your own safety lie. He also recently moved to Texas. Would be awesome to see you guys do a cooperative video.
Louis Rossman / Hoovie's Garage crossover. Nice! 🤣
Rossman is a stand up guy, probably about to get booted from YT. I don't see Tyler's mechanics getting along with him as they seem very comfortable overcharging him for new parts instead of repairing the existing ones.
What is “corporate greed”?
@@Scouter98sometimes buying new is the way to go, even if it’s more then buying used. For example the turn signal auto cancel switch in my accord went bad, and we replaced it with a used one. In a few months the used one had the same issue. A new part straight from Honda would have lasted much longer.
@@EvilTurkeySlices I agree that fixing is 100% the best case senario. From what I understood about the Bently, some tech related parts are serialized meaning that even if you bought it new, you still require to go to the dealership for them to "register" it to your car.
Right to REPAIR is essential
But you can repair it! All you need is a $10k brand specific scan tool that you learned how to use, $15k in parts, another $5k in specialty tools, and a couple weeks off of work! And Just like that you DIY'ed the Alternator.
@@potcommitted5355 So much this! A right to repair alone solves absolutely nothing - It is a good start, but nothing more, nothing less.
This is why I hope Aptera gets big. They already have RtR at the forefront of their design.
They said they'll even put QRs on the parts that link you to repair videos, they'll send you wire diagrams, body files in case you need to design wraps or the like for it. We need more of that!
You couldn't repair a hybrid vehicle...if the electric side of the driveline failed...or one of 100 computers that allow the electric powertrain to communicate with the gas side.
@@lukewalker1051and that's why I just plain don't like hybrids. I have a petrol car and an EV, but I would never buy a hybrid. Worst of both worlds with added complications and difficulties.
My grandfather had a 2 bay shop. He retired when cars became more electrical than mechanical.
Breakers yards, in the 70’s & 80’s, looked like breakers yards - now they look like parking lots. Insanity.
What's tragic is mechanics, owners and salvage yards (near me) are so dumb they can't even fix valuable cars with easy issues
The make do and med attitude died with the war generation to some level.
There's a video somewhere here on YT that I saw a few years ago that shocased how cars were recycled in Europe. Most all of the cars shown couldn't have been more than 5-7 years old. They were free of dents, dings, and even their paint jobs shone like new! I'm no tree-hugger, but sending off cars that new to the scrapper and expecting people to buy new ones all the time is the epitome of wastefulness.
@@tempest411 I’ve seen it. The environment isn’t the driver behind this, it’s profit. I look after my vehicles - my van is 24 years old and drives perfectly yet I am penalised with excessive road tax because of its age. Where’s the incentive to not over-consume?
@@mybrilliantlife9476You are quite right. Perfectly good vehicles being scrapped over thermostats and simple ignition problems.
Feels like the whole system is in free fall: because it is. There was a reason the Book of the Revelation of Jesus Christ was written.
My wife always asks me why I will work on my 1966 MGB, but not touch our daily drivers and this video captures everything as to why I won't touch a newer vehicle.
Cars are manufactured, like smartphones. They have evolved the technology to pack as much capability into as small a package as possible. They don't want you repairing them. They want you to replace them on a predictable and short buying cycle. They will keep this up until buyers demand better.
No, just buy from the manufacturers that stay old school. China, India, etc
@@georgeallen7667 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Back then they weren't like this even in the 2000s never had issues with most of thoes cars until the last decade now these car companies don't want us keeping cars for 50 years
Time to get a corded rotary phone & call it a day!
@@georgeallen7667 Well the goons at the EPA will prohibit you from importing "old skool" vehicles, Lister style diesel engines, equipment, etc, citing their planet saving emission standards.
A prime example of the "throw it away when it's slightly damaged" state of affairs that we have been living in for the last 30-ish years, things are no longer built to last, they are just built to be replaced.
Plus you have the government trying to steer us towards electric vehicles let me know how that goes oh I'll let you know it's a disaster
this sad stuff is why i want to keep the car i got from my parents for as long as possible
Planned obsolescence goes back a lot longer than that, mate…
In Dec. 2023, gave my 2003 Ford Focus with 205,000 miles to a relative who uses it daily. I got a 2010 Corolla with 125,000 miles and expect to get another 125,000 miles out of it... at least. My phone got ran over a couple times, long story.
Hope you backed up you're contacts. Happened to me,I didnt.
Retired auto mechanic here and I have said for a long time that cars were getting stupid and harder to fix. Recently had a 2019 ford escape with a very fixable transmission issue that nobody wanted to fix, they just wanted to replace at almost $9000. Traded the car that weekend. Oh and car only had 75000 miles. Did not buy another Ford product.
I’ve thought many times of taking one of these heavily electronically burdened vehicles, gutting out the electronics and put in a universal hot rod wiring harness. Swap out the steering column if needed, and put in a crate engine with a carb.
Then the outside the car looks the same, but it doesn’t need a computer to turn on the brake light. 🤪
I remember that being done with old Jags where the V12 was so problematic and expensive to replace but people loved the look, coachwork and handling. There were kits developed to swap to chevy small block and transmission.
One problem; emissions regs. Although a Holley Sniper TBI conversion is still a step up from carbs.
@@piercehawke8021 Sniper is not as great as you think.
@@MrSloika I'll take your word for it :)
@@piercehawke8021Not in the free state of Florida. Vote wisely.
If Hoovie was familiar with the "sunk cost fallacy", we wouldn't have a channel to enjoy anymore.
For real, I heard "well we're this far in" from both mechanics lol
It's a big problem for gamblers also.
Shhhh don't enlighten him
1:56 Stone Cold Hoovie.... 😢
@@Onewheelordeal some cars are priceless. Emotional connections are worth more than money.
Ultra-luxury car brands believe it harms their brand to have a bunch of sub-$20k cars out there being kept alive by independent shops and DIYers.
Maybe NOT: Rolls Royce likes to advertise that 98 percent of all of their vehicles are still on the road.
Not to mention why would Bentley sell the module for $20 dollars. So then the car can be fixed have no other problems and they made 20 dollars off the exchange? They'd go out of business and then there would really be no module
@@jamesellsworth9673 Pretty much all of them being driven very little and maintained by the dealer, not independent shops or DIYers.
Well, it doesn't hurt them immediately, but it hurts the resale values of these cars down the road. Not all prospective new car buyers consider resale value, but plenty do, and will avoid buying the car. This does eventually hurt the reputation of the brand, and reduces sales.
For example, Tesla used to be extremely stringent with supplying spare parts. This made Teslas virtually impossible to repair once out of warranty, except by paying ludicrous money at a Tesla service center. In recent years, they've loosened this policy a lot since resale values tanked, and prospective buyers realized it's not worth buying a $75000 car that will be worth $20000 in just 5 years, and even less if something not covered by warranty breaks.
@@jamesellsworth9673 mainly because any of the ones that get crashed or have significant issues get written off as category B 🤷🏽♂️😂😂they literally don't allow any insurers to do anything all the assessments and decisions are done by themselves ...... And most of the time it is written off as CAT B (not allowed to be put back on the road can only be broken for parts)
I was a service advisor in the 80s. The T tops on GM “A” body car leaked water, whistles when driving when they were NEW!😳
Seems like your Gand Sport is normal !😳
They were in need of some serious body stiffening.
I had low mile two 89 Camaros many years ago and could not believe how bad they leaked. Got a hardtop that I still have.
Yep, 94 Trans Am and it leaked, every time.
True story:
I was a BMW stealership technician... Master certified from '99-'09
When the E65 came out, I remember thinking to myself "these are gonna be completely WORTHLESS in 15-20 years..."
It just didn't make sense to me at all
They want to go all-electric because then you will only have the illusion of control. You may push a button to start your vehicle but they can shut you down with the click of a mouse if they want-and there isn’t a thing you can do about it.
they can do that with gas vehicles too, anything with a 3g or higher cell conection
@@JD-yx7be Depends on if the vehicle has an ECM. You drive a '67 GMC pickup with a small-block Chevy that has an HEI ignition you can keep rolling...and smile at them as you drive by.
The same problem exists in the military.
When I was in in the 80's we could fix the electronic stuff. As time went on it changed to test light, red or green. Card out, new card in and faulty card sent back to the manufacturer for replacement. This has gotten far worse now days, and most Western equipment is not repairable by servicemen in the field.
Its kinda hard to build a radio out of discrete components and have encryption still.
Good old R390.... I hated working on this things.
Russia understood this, keeping things simple as possible. Western equipment is the nice shiny toy that looks great in the showroom but that's about it.
@HansensUniverseT-A right and that's why russian equipment has proven itself so well in combat...oh, wait
@@danielstrom3253 they are doing quite well in Ukraine
Used airbag modules can never be programmed legitimately, IIRC it's US Law or something like that to prevent cleared accident data. But there are services on ebay that'll read and rewrite the data from the chip, EEPROM or something like that. And reset it for you that way. It probably exists for VW/Audi and usually it's $30 or so.
EEPROM is the time of memory used in the module. They are just charging you 30$ to hook up to the module and run a program on a computer to read/write to it.
But it's a needed service and 30$ is quite reasonable when the only other thing to do is buy a 2000$ part.
@@Finny869 Never used one myself but I've done my share of programming. The ebay sellers advertise their services as airbag clearing so I assume that they can write whatever they want to the EEPROM. It's probably worth a shot, I did check and see it advertised for VW/Audi modules.
this, hope hoovie sees this as a possible option
@@Finny869reasonable? I think you mean to say cheap.
100$ is reasonable to ship, program, and reship a module.
Thats why as European i'm in love with US cars. EU cars are like this for years, and they are all like this. Premium - budget no difference. I remember first time i saw 2013 dodge charger hemi and i was shocked, car from 2010s i can fix at home with my buddy while drinking beer. Same with pentastar v6 or LS V8 cars.
Lol. And you will be spending most weekends tinkering on it, like some Nurburgring fanboy with his race car. :) But, yes, it CAN be done. The sad part as you mention is when no options exist aside from a new engine or similar.
Most wholesome comment😁
You'd shit yourself to work on a 70s chevy truck lol
@@topher420s lol. You can practically stand in the engine bay next to the engine, there's so much space.
I hate the way new cars are just covered by a big plastic engine cover. I miss simplicity to an extent. Euro cars seem to be made in a way that makes even a good mechanic pull his hair out.
Hoovie singlehandedly keeping this car wizard guy employed for decades. Not sure why Hoovie doesn't just hire him as his fleet manager and call it a day..
Wizard is probably making better money on average than Hoovie. Besides Hoovie is like a trust fund kid anyway.
When I left the dealership in 2019 it was for this reason bad labor rates more and more complicated and after 15 years I hung my wrenches up and moved to greener pastures
Definitely keep the bathroom in the mini barn. That way you don’t have to run to the house to use latrine.
If it's just #1, go outside around the corner and let it fly.
@terrylessmann2274 would you potentially want a section your yard to have a slight smell of pee?
@@terrylessmann2274 Doesn't work when it's windy, raining, or snowing.
Andy Gump it.
Us rural folks use trees but we don't have garages and yards this pretty.
As an Audi/VW tinkerer, I would suggest to look at Canada. They have better relationships with OEM German suppliers than in the US. I work with a parts dealer in Toronto who has never failed to find me weird parts.
Could you link the supplier?
@@spoileralert1745 German Supply near Toronto might be a start.
and why is this the case?
@@jamesmedina2062 Ask VW
@@jamesmedina2062 as stupid as that may sound, the US market has a special relation with every big manufacturer. But Canada is sometimes in the category "other countries".
Wife's SUV gets damaged in early December. It's not 5 years old. Only took 4+ months to get parts, damage repaired, and painted. Then had to return due to sh!t work....I told the regional manager, "You know it's easier to get parts for my '76 Valiant sedan & easier to fix."
*mumbles* "okay boomer"
- regional manager
What kind of suv?
Not only that, Ford didn't even have the parts necessary to repair their last major recall (engine fires), had a waiting time of "indefinite" and recommended you just park outside and away from buildings while waiting. It took 8 months.
My wife's Explorer is 8 years old and all the plastics are crumbling everywhere.
@@SSJbattousai06 Lincoln
So many talk about this these days but I was hearing the same stuff 20 years ago. People who are of more modest financial means buy a used luxury car thinking they will get a cool car for a bargain and then they go to the parts store and have a heart attack. With these luxury cars just because they get older doesn't make them cheaper to fix. I mean look at what Jay Leno pays to keep his old cars running.
I think what will change is peoples mindset of buying a car more for what it is rather than the bargain price tag. If they need just a daily driver than there are plenty of affordable options.
I would never buy any of these cars expecting them to be cheap to fix. Ever.
I like the way The Wizard runs his shop, like a NAVY ship Captain. No Bull,No excuses. And he is a happier camper for the efforts to not take jobs that cost him time,which costs money. I would do things exactly the same if i could start over new.(Im too old now,Retired and not going back to the dirt and grease.But i do love the job.)
The module with that part number crosses with a 7L Touareg, Porsche Cayenne, and VW Phaeton. It is $600-$700 from a VW dealer.
that module is NLA. It is the same exact module as my Audi. It was $50 at the audi dealer, new, before it was discontinued.
😢
There's literally 3-4 modules on eBay for -maybe- $100ish. I don't understand though...can they not be used?
@@ryanpangle The car ninja tried several times and could not get it to work. Something tells me only the dealer can do it but they will not do it to a used part.
That module won't work, same part number but different parameters. The one he's looking for is 3D0-909-601-E /00P. A quick search and I found a company that can repair and reset the original for $60. That's what most recommended anyway. Since the modules are typically programmed to the vin.
I've been involved with the auto industry since 1974. I earned 3 Honda/Acura Masters Certs. 1 Toyota Master. 1 Chrysler 1 Jeep and 2 GM master Cert. Emission Instructor-retired, A Tire Certifcation Instructor. I am presently retired and own 2 late model Jeeps. For each I purchased service manuals and tech series updates. To Service or check I purchased a late model Diagnostic Scanner. Even now, I have to get in touch with a Local Jeep Dealer as only the manufacturer has the best information. Vehicles change so quickly that even dealers are stomped by Quirks that appear. I grew up owning a 1970 Duster that was simple to repair. When my wife bought a new Chevrolet Camero and had problems not starting, scanner showed computer model problems. Bought a new Computer and nothing. After hours and hours it ended up being a defective Key chip!! I spoke to a Tech at Land Rover and he said new vehicles can have 20-30 computers. Glad I'm retired!! Yanni
Why did you get jeeps ind instead of 1990-2010 land Cruiser?
@@safffff1000 I guess because when I got drafted in 1969 and spent 8 years as a Military Police drove Jeeps 24/7. When I got out a bought my first Jeep. Guess I was stuck on Jeeps since! Yanni
As such a thoroughly qualified and educated master mechanic - obviously a “car guy” - it boggles the mind as to why out of so many amazing and interesting cars from the past 70 years of automotive innovation you chose to own a modern Jeep. I suppose I could better understand if it were a ‘80’s-something CJ or something else simple and bulletproof, but a modern Jeep? I’m hoping it’s a Trackhawk or the Hemi-equipped or electric Wrangler… I remember from my days working at a car auction Jeeps - especially modern Wranglers - were the most absolutely terrible driving things on 4 wheels. And God help you if it had all-terrain tires on it - uncomfortable, loud, and the interior materials were awful.
They say “It’s a Jeep thing, you wouldn’t understand.”
They’re exactly right. I will never understand!
@@slunktycoon I got a great deal on the 1970 Duster-340-4 speed!! Got boared and bought Fiat 124 Roadster and got married.
Emisssions instructor is the dumbest thing I've ever heard of 😂
Tyler: I’m having trouble getting anybody to ship my Fisker.
Also Tyler: I use ShipStation and you should too!!
Yeah, kinda idiotic. It's all about money for himself. Come along, sheep.
It's a NY snowbird thing for all shippers. Definitely not defending any shippers but most are tied up this time of year.
@@jeffs4690- I know. Stuff happens. I saw comedy in the irony.
Until recently I had three cars in the household. . 15 years old 22 and 52. I love that there are people who can service these... though was tough finding a good Jaguar mechanic for the 2008. Anyway I just sold it and bought a 2020 Mercedes E450 wagon. You bet I'm going to buy the extended warranty.
You make good points for holding on to 30 year old cars. Made in the 70s, 80s, and 90s.
Two of the best cars I ever owned were a 1975 Buick Riviera and a 1979 Ford Thunderbird, and I didn't even get them until they were over twenty years old with over 200k miles on them already. They were built like tanks back then.
Love my 04 Yukon. I don't want anything newer
I’m not saying this is easy, or smart, but I think the way forward with cars like these is repairing the module. Circuit boards only have so many things that can go wrong. If it’s not physically broken, it’s usually the capacitors which could be considered wear items. If you replace all the capacitors on an old board, it will work more times than not.
Maybe we all just need to get better at diagnosing and servicing circuit boards.
Yeah true. I didn't want to pay for a window lift switch. We did figure out that it was corrosion on the contact surface in the switch. Cleaner didn't work but a fine sandpaper did the trick to clean the contact surface.
Might be possible for passive components, but anything requiring programming might be more difficult. But I agree I can expect more shops offering such a service to be used by mechanics.
Do these modules not get encased in resin, to keep moisture out (and to discourage reverse engineering)?
Chips need programming or are sometimes made specifically for the device and less available than the device itself
Which is why the idea that EV cars are less complex and will last longer isn't entirely true.
Sold my BMWs, sold my Jeep, sold the wife’s SUV. We both drive older now. No car payments and two classic cars that are cheap to fix and run forever. We updat them with modern suspensions and engine swaps that are aftermarket supported. Mine a 79 Malibu, hers a 94 2 Door Yukon. And couldn’t be happier
You have a good wife, most have to have something new and shinny to impress everyone that they're successfully in debt 😂
I am a mechanic and drive vehicles from as far back as 1998. Old is gold.
@@melissasmess2773this is one of the many reasons why the mother of my children is my ex. Rack up debt to have something shiny. Even my sons as adults see this.
Thanks popeye089 everyone on here is bitching and complaining. Not you you showed how its done. Again thank you
I’ve done similarly and now have a 1987 XJ6 (Series 3) and a 2004 LS430. The LS has a ton going on electronically, but it all works flawlessly and has twenty years of good history behind it. The XJ6 is very mechanical and only has two noticeable computing devices; the ECM in the trunk (smartly away from the engine heat), and the dash trip computer. Both have rock solid engines, and they both draw praise everywhere I drive them.
Keeping older vehicles running works if you don’t live in the snow belt areas as you can’t keep up against the corrosion.
That airbag module is $800 on the US VW parts website. It's the same one from the Phaeton and Touareg.
I think the problem is they can't program it
@@colchronic , often even the dealers have trouble to program their own stuff. I have a 2005 A6, which had a steering lock module fail and it took them a whole day for the new part to communicate with the car. Total mess.
@@heiner71My A3 went into limp mode so frequently that I sold it back during the dieselgate recall. That was a close one!
I replaced a rear brake light bulb for $6 for a customer. But I couldn't clear the code and get the check light off. Thanks to Chrysler, it now has to go to the dealer and cost $200 to turn off the red light on the dash. And I have fairly new multiple high dollar scanners. Oreillys and every other part store also said they couldn't get the parts for them. Chrysler takes the longest to release the designs to reproduce parts, so it forces you to buy from the dealership.
Can/bus systems are causing so many issues making it harder and harder to diag properly. And yes, collector cars are becoming a thing of the past. Collector cars will be stuck in the pre-1970's category. After no more than 20 yrs, you won't be able to by the electronics to fix modern vehicles.
Lately, I've taken several modern vehicles to the dealer for diag just to be told they don't know either, more time required to figure it out. It's a lottery draw to know what the cost will be to fix something these day.
It is truly sad when the average new car costs more than a four bedroom house in the San Francisco Bay area 50 years ago. And that's not even factoring in the total cost of ownership
In 1925 a Ford Model T cost $300, and workers at Ford were paid $5 a day. So a worker could buy a Model T on 3 months' wages. Income tax 1.5% for that worker.
That junkyard definitely sent you a known junk engine and hoped they wouldn't hear from you again
Even getting a reman engine is a crap-shoot these days. Forget about local machine shops. There are no local machine shops left.
They ended up buying the whole car from him. Now it's getting parted out
I had a 78 Chevy Monza my dad bought cheap with a blown head gasket. Fixed it with liquid glass and drove it for a few years. Never had another problem with it. Eventually totaled it so it ended up where it belonged anyways.
Yeah, but then you got stuck driving a Monza which is an embarrassment.
@@bigmacdaddy1234 The owner wanted a drivable car and not worry about having it stolen.
Open deck design is what was a big problem with the engines in Chevy Vegas. The aluminum block didn't have iron liners, so the piston sleeves would vibrate while the engine was running, which would cause the bores to get scuffed, and destroy the head gaskets. The cars were transported from the factory in rail cars stood on their nose, which I think also caused problems with things internally getting damaged by unloaders who didn't follow procedure. Vert-A-Pac it was called.
True Story: My dad's 2016 Ford Fusion Hybrid was acting funny so he asked me if I thought maybe the alternator was bad. I told him I would take a look... I popped the hood and could not find even ONE thing that resembled a car engine or components thereof. Tried checking the running voltage, should be 14+, but I was not allowed to start the engine while the hood was open. I could not FIND an alternator, could not CHECK an alternator, told dad he had to take it to the dealer. And this, being a simple operation that I could do in auto shop in High School... can't do it anymore. Cars are no longer "Horse/Buggy Replacements", they are "Tech Toys" that "generate corporate profits".
I worked in the car sales industry for 5 years and I learned to hate anything from the last 15 years.
I’m a professional driver now and drive multiple vehicles with the peace of mind my own 2004 Volvo V70 20T won’t let me down when I get around to driving it occasionally.
“That’s just how things are these days.” Hoovie’s 5 years away from “Get off my lawn!” 😂
In the 80s, mechanics said the same thing about imports. Some use to have signs that said "Domestic" or "Foreign".
Hes right tho
@@catinthehat5140totally different situation.
And loosing the remaining of his hair…
@@wizzyno1566 how? shops wouldn't do foreign cars because they were complicated (they didn't know how to do it is what complicated means)
That was a nice black 1967 Cadillac at the Car Wizard's shop. That's my style.
'67 hubcaps. Good eye.
That module is also in a VW Phaeton, touareg and cayenne, so you should be able to find one i think
It wasn't an issue of finding it, they said they tried multiple used modules but that the computer couldn't program it. So it's likely that they made it to where after it's been programmed to a car that it can't be programmed again to another car to force you to buy a new one and have the dealer program it.
I don't know how it is in the states but in Germany Dealer software for older Cars like VCDS for VAG is easy to get (they somehow find their way out of dealerships). Maybe you could program it with a original VCDS Software.
@@TheCobruhAlienat0r With some VAG cars the modules have serial numbers coded into them and you have to code that serial number into the ECM (or whatever the master unit is) before it will talk to it.
That Maserati Ghibli looks like an automotive war zone.
Piece of crap.
The Testarossa engine is ancient, and still one of the most beautiful engines I’ve ever seen.
....and dead-nuts RELIABLE compared to modern Jeeps, let-alone other Ferraris.
It is a work of art.
I recall back in 2010 I bought a used 2007 Lincoln Navigator. The Navigator was mint and just a beautiful truck but for some reason The Navigation System was missing it's Disc with the Map's. I went to my local Dealer and they wanted $400 for the Disc with the Maps and I told them no thanks. I checked eBay and found a recent map Disc for $25 and it worked like a Charm! Dealers are such a terrible rip off for anything!
I have a 2016 Ford Focus Titanium. I was trying to update the Sync with USB stick and it just keeps telling me it's out of disk space or something. the dealership I took it to in Texas told me it's $200 for them to update it for me instead. they were apparently shady anyway so I'm glad I don't live there anymore. I don't need album artwork for my mp3s anymore anyway. 🤣
@@mecha2001I realize in your case it’s a 2016 vehicle so a 3rd party radio makes slightly less sense then like a 2000 car, but still I swear 3rd party radios are just simply better in every situation.
@@zacmitchel92 lol it does what I need it to. would've been cool to have Android Auto but I live in Wisconsin now and I can just handle my phone legally the old fashioned way. 😂 cheers dude
@@mecha2001 for sure. Im just saying I’ve experienced manufacturer radios that have Bluetooth and usb and such and just do not see a reason to have them. Have a 3rd party radio cuz I need it compared to the original tape deck. Experiencing both first and third party radios I swear third party works better in every way.
man my kid kicked the back of my seat and the panel came down in a 07 infinity m 35. the dealer charged me $300 for aplastic clip. my buddy worked at Nissan and the same clip was $20. the dealers a just rip u off
Buying my 21 year old truck last year is starting the best car investment ever. Sold my '11 GTI due to the electrical gremlins
Yep bought a 02 Nissan frontier xe with 110k miles two years ago for 5k. I feel like I scored.
I've been running a 2003 Nissan in the UK for the last 8 years. Zero issues. Just routine maintenance at an independent garage. Most reliable car I've ever had. Wouldn't have a brand new car if it came free. Anything post 2009 is rubbish.
Tyler, this is indeed going to be the way with the newer cars. There are many specialists who can repair modules or supply reconditioned ones. This is where the online forums come into their own. RUclips is also another useful platform.
I have four cars, all paid for for many years. All of them are over 100k miles, one is significantly over 200k, and two are close to 200k. They all run great and only the Silverado Z-71 4x4 has reliability issues (dashboard doesn't work half the time and the battery dies after a few days. I have to keep it plugged in all the time).
The other three cars are Scions, and were all purchased new. A 2006 xB (toyota), 2013 FR-S (subaru) and 2016 iA (Mazda). All very solid runners. The iA has been all over the US (we live in Kentucky and that car has been to Seattle, Chicago, St Louis, Arizona, south Florida). The xB has 230k miles and is still on the original clutch. I hit a deer at 150k and the front end was creamed pretty good. I have after market (amazon) LED's as my headlights on one side now. It burns no oil and drives "smooth as puddin'" I'll drive it until it leaves me on the side of the road.
I'm 70 and over trying to impress people with what I drive. It's why the xB is my favorite. But I do use the FR-S to get to the golf course. 🙂
I've never been into exotic cars, though my friend from High School races Porsches. He's been into them since his 924 he bought in the early 80's. They are fun, but I prefer my six speed FR-S. For starters, I can easily fix it myself, though I had the dealership replace the spark plugs at 140k miles since to do it right you really have to jack up the engine a bit. But it is amazingly fun using Michelin SS4's on the smooth Kentucky twisties all over my rural area.
BTW, as I see what's happening with modern cars, I may have purchased my last car. I'll try to keep these four running as long as possible.
Just a thought but given the proximity of the large garage to the pond, consider having rain runoff from the roof directed into the pond. You still have a chance to bury drainage tubes connected to the building downspouts. Might as well collect the water if you can. I would also consider a micro turbine up on that windmill tower with some battery storage to power your fountain and other power needs at the pond.
When the Wizard retires will he be willing to visit and answer questions while you turn the wrench? I used to work at U-Haul a long time ago and my manager at the time broke his ribs. I got to do my first brake controller install. He did stop by for a while, even though he was not back to work yet, in case I had problems. I got it done ok and the vehicle owner was very understanding on the extra time spent (If I remember right not charged for).
That Bentley airbag module is shared with the VW Phaeton and VW Touareg. Gan literally get them for under £10 used in the UK. This sounds like a ‘Mercia problem. Also, not sure how Ninja is trying to program this but in my experience you need ODIS-E and only ODIS-E will do it. Universal scanners just don’t work as reliably.
Who's Mercia
Yes, it''s at the very least a Phaeton part number. Here in Germany, you can also find people, who will fix or reprogram them. Having someone fix it would also avoid having to Program a new one.
@@Popovich16 America
Modern cars need knowledge in modern things. I'm not bashing ninja or wizard, but they are mechanics. They do understand the mechanical side, deeply. But this is another ball game. I heard about a dude, who had problems with his Tesla, had a wreck and major rebuild. Tesla wouldn't either touch it or was asking an arm and a leg, can't remember. The solution was to find a guy in eastern Europe, hook a computer to the car and through remote desktop connection let him code the thing, and be on the phone to press buttons and do what he asks when needed. They got it to work.
There are guys, who either can fix a broken ECU etc, or can code one from a wrecked car. But it's not easy, it takes time, dedication and deep understanding.
@SashaGrace94 , you can allso just use Ross-Tech´s VCDS when you need to program VAG modules, but i dont know if they are as avalible in the US as they are for us here in the EU/UK 🙂
Now people know why I am looking for a well maintained 1995-1996 Ford F-150 with the 4.9l inline 6 cylinder engine. It is because it will be on the road long after all the 2010-2024 models are long gone. Most of your older 1996 and older insert brand made great trucks that last a long time and easy to work on. That old Ford Camper Special you purchased awhile back is a keeper Hoovie you should hang on to that one.
You're one of the few smart ones left... First vehicle I ever owned (purchased in 1998) is a 1980 F150 4x4 with the 300 inline 6 and NP435 granny 4 speed, I still own it, it refuses to die. I currently own 8 different Ford trucks from 1980-96, and I've owned about 30 others if you count past projects and parts trucks.
Why just limit yourself to '95 and '96 model years? From 1987 to 95 they're all basically the same, they updated the body of the trucks in '92 but mechanically there is very little difference. In '96 they added obd2 which (in my opinion) just added extra sensors and nonsense that makes zero difference on how it runs when it all works, but causes extra headaches when they fail.
The 351w is a great engine too. Makes decent torque down low like a 300 but can still scream up higher in the rpms like a 302. In '94 the v8 trucks got roller camshafts, so they're about 25hp more peppy then the older v8 trucks. Other then adding efi in '87 the 300 is basically the same engine in 1996 that it was in 1965.
@@admiralrustyshackleford119 I like Fuel injection and by the 1995-1996 year models Ford had all the bugs ironed out and they were the two best models to buy and the older you go the harder some parts can be to locate even though most componants were the same they had differences. I have not ruled them out though it is just very unlikely I will find one as affordable. 1976-1978 is my favorite body style. I got a pretty good truck now a 2003 GMC Sierra with a 4.8l they are easy to work on and last as well. I just remember my 1992 F-150 and how easy it was to work on and maintain. Plus I have always liked the looks of those trucks.
@@JasPlun True, they had about a decade and a half by 95/96 to work the bugs out. I'm a Ford guy at heart, but I can't stand any of their trucks after 1996 (or '97 for the F250-F350) If I absolutely had to buy a newer truck it'd be one of those 1999-09 GMs with the 4.8 or 5.3. I know they're pretty much unicorns but a regular cab short bed with the 4.8 and a 5 speed would be a cool little truck to have around.
Its old and junk admit it. Stop buying old junk feeling like you made a difference when you are a poor slave
The relatively cheap, small cars with the small engines are still very nice to work on. But they get more rare every month.
Yup. Hatchbacks are vanishing, or being sold exclusively for 40k+ in insanely marked up hot versions.
“You will buy a crossover that’s as difficult to work on as it is ugly and you will love it for exactly 3-5 years before buying another.”
@@piedpiper1172most crossovers are just lifted hatchbacks. You can’t name one hatchback that doesn’t share an engine and transmission with a cross over.
Don’t buy 6 cylinder transaxle cars and you should be fine.
@@Klake-bk2dp No, they’re imitation hatchbacks shoved onto light truck frames and into the light truck regulatory category.
It’s not just about the engine and transmission. They’re heavier and taller-the two worst possible traits for handling performance and economy, and the increased size further limits max speed. Lifted is exactly the last trait I want in a hatchback lol, there is a reason tuner culture has overwhelmingly lowered hatches for decades (really, in all cases aside from silly safari shenanigans).
Plus, they lack crash compatibility with cars. Light trucks are meant to be work vehicles, not the default commuter. Heavier vehicles cost us all huge amounts in increased road wear (anything above 4,000lbs is above the design fatigue limit for most US roads and streets, which is also a way EVs need improvement), increased crash intensity, increased injuries to pedestrians, and increased roll over frequency.
They’re bad SUVs, and terrible hatchbacks.
@@piedpiper1172 what light truck frame goes to which crossover?
lol, it lowers the max speed? Name one crossover that can’t reach 90 MPH?
Your critiques quite literally do not matter to 90% of people buying cars. Also, in this context does it matter? Nobody cares…
@@Klake-bk2dp Your ignorance is showing. Light trucks are a regulatory classification. It’s literally why they’re called cross overs lol. They are made to resemble cars as closely as possible, while “crossing over” into the light truck category.
Also, again, weight and height. These reduce efficiency. Manufactures are stretching engines to still hit mpg requirements because of this, and it’s why failure rates are so high. The same drive trains in actual cars would be even more efficient.
And the public does care very much about efficiency. The same thing that reduces max speed (drag, cus big), reduces efficiency and acceleration (aka, the two most heavily marketed characteristics of cars).
Spend some time looking at the marketing for the Kona N and it’s price point competitors. You’ll see exactly what I mean about marketing making a big deal out of performance and efficiency.
Thank you for sharing. It’s not always rainbows and sunshine.
Thanks Hoovie for the years if entertainment.
that airbag module has the same number on as my old 2006 vw touareg. Got one used for 25€ . worked fine.
👍
My newest vehicle is a 2001. Focus on the 60's thru '00. Easier to work on and the parts are cheaper.
Imagine that's a lot easier to do someplace where they don't salt the roads!
I'm very torn on this. My DIY mechanic instinct totally agrees with you. The crash safety of newer vehicles is a really compelling reason to go newer though.
@@drunkenhobo8020power wash your under carriages, f road salt.
@@Elloris A lot of car guys like to downplay the safety aspect, but you're right. Drivers are the most distracted they've ever been, they're in the biggest, heaviest, and most powerful vehicles they've ever been in, and there is more traffic volume than there's ever been. It's dangerous on the roads nowadays.
@@Elloris safety is cool, but driving a pile of wires really does suck substantially. Some new cars are incredible to experience additionally, whereas the quality and elegance of the older generations on back really evoke and represent what cars used to mean.
Thats why I drive Mk 4 Jetta TDi's. 1999-2003. Easy to fix modify and comfortable. Cheap parts. 50 mpg and easy to modify with great results. With the right tune, you can have a beautiful driving all around great car.
Well over 500k on mine.
Luxury cars that dont run but are still comfortable inside....new homes for the homeless of the 2030's. Rent one for $2000 /month. Junk yards will become the new 5 star hotels. Add a food truck or two and you have your own town.
I'm glad to keep my 89 GTA for 25 years now. Technology and everything unfortunately sucks. Everything is getting worse to replace or find new and older
You are doing great things. Bring lots of joy. I have been critical, but you really put a lot of effort and love into these videos. Keep it up
We live in a world where most goods are made to be disposable to keep consumers spend more than they should. It’s quantity over quality.
There is not one part for my 1964 split window VW bus I cannot buy.
Not one part for that vehicle is still available from VW.
How about the airbag module?
@@stuartjohnston4353 I wish him well to drive it😂
If they still made a 67 bug today it would sell like hot cakes. Just keep pumping out 67 bugs and some company would do good.
You can still buy them and the parts to repair them. You just can't buy them new anymore.
You may have the right to repair but you can’t afford the parts.
Sounds like a fruity tech company some of you may have heard of.
Just wait until all cars become part of the "Internet of Things" and the manufacturers decide your 5-10 year old car needs to be replaced and they send a signal to brick it. Time to buy a new car, who cares if you can't afford it.
All new cars ARE part of the IoT. They track EVERYTHING, and some insurance companies are now raising your insurance because of your driving information which they can purchase from the facility that stores all of it.
It probably won't be the manufacturer making the decision but the establishment, government, insurance, whatever...
@@MH-ev3wr Doesn't matter. ALL my vehicles are pre-2010. Been building a warehouse full of parts for them thru the years before the manufacture decides not to make them. It's like MS ending Windows 10 next year.
Car Wizard, if you were going to rebuild that engine, ANY machine shop worth 4 cents a day would have ran that block through a caustic hot tank washer and gotten EVERY BIT of that junk out of the block.
The problem with that is give your local machine shop a call and see how far they are backed up and then multiply it times 3, that’s when you’ll actually receive your block back lol.
But at what cost? Does the engine need to be broken down the bare block? Time?
Revuilding old junk is so stupid why not build new stuff that isnt junk for once people
That drivetrain dropout from the testarossa is a work of art.
@@TheAnnoyingBoss That depends on the car. If it's an average car I would agree that it's not worth it. But if it's a high performance car that is going to get upgraded forged pistons and rods then its totally worth it as it would be better than a stock new engine. By the way most sporty cars benefit from a healthy aftermarket of high performance parts.
Thanks for the shop update 👍🏻
Stay positive!
It will be fantastic when finished
Yea!
I can't be the only one who cringed everytime Tyler placed the module on top of the Bentley! 😂😂
It's just another pos car!
I think a slight clearcoat scratch on that car's roof is the least of its worries.
If he did that to my car we would have a chat
😵💫🫣
🫣
1) 11:25: the engine is not totaled, you can send it to machine shop to resurface 2) the 2000 dollar module, all car today using Can bus (1 wire for signal, 1 wire for ground). It is not encrypted, you can inject your own signal to by pass the controller module. or replace it with manual window controller.
Thanks for the garage update! It’s looking good, I think you need a big neon Hoovies garage sign for the wall in there.
Always love the "weeezird!" and then he shows wizard doing something strange😂
Happy to see Tyler waaaaaay ahead, staying connected to the people,,, you hear that Doug!
Doug has over 3x the subscribers
@@Onewheelordeal yeah, but who is really watching him?
@@theangelking96Id guess approximately 3x as many ppl as this video even if I'm not one of them
Why does Doug need to be connected to the people? What does that even mean? Watch and enjoy his content or don’t, but saying he’s not connected to the people. 😂
They used to do jalopnik videos together, I don’t think they’re rivals
I feel that module. My ABS module for my 2005 A4 B6 Avant Quattro was 1500 from factory, and my Catalytic Converter was shipped from Canada when there was only 7 left in the world at 2500. I FEEL YOU HOOVIE!
$1,500 for a new ABS module is actually quite good.
@@johnt.848 not when you can't really afford it, it's not.
3:58 you can probably find this module in a golf, Porsche cayenne or, something similar
Finally you got something right.
Said that parts will be a problem, plus the fact that 99% of mechanics simply dont understand computers, the digital world or new technologies!
I give these garages, another 3 to 7 years.
Financial ruin! Catastrophe! Let's go buy a Cybertruck!
I just love to watch your shenanigans Hoovie!
Happens that past luxury cars, maintain their expensive maintenance. Taylor savings us car enthusiasts thousands avoiding some bargain luxury cars.
I’d like to see you interview Sreten from M539 Restorations on this. I think he’d have a different viewpoint because he’s experienced problems with modern complicated cars but he’s also accustomed to taking used engines down to bare blocks. I think he’s the only channel that actually takes cars from the bottom of the depreciation curve - that is complicated newish cars out of warranty- and actually does near-concours restorations such that they would be as reliable or more so than the new car
The problem with Streten is that no workshop does things the proper, dedicated way. Those kinds of repairs are not profitable, and require skill and equipment that is not cheap. Of course, 99,9%of the people (even buyers of luxury cars) don't want to pay for even basic maintenance, let alone proper in-depth repairs. Modern cars are crap. Current workshops are crap. But this industry is going the way is going because consumers don't see vehicles like we used to, and are demanding things that inadvertently cause an awful product/service.
@@Biker_Gremling there are shops that rebuild engines and such, there are shops that do more or at a higher level than Sreten (just look at what Larry Chen highlights at SEMA etc). It's just expensive you are right.
Great dose of reality! You don't need a fancy car to have these problems. Try a DIY change on a throttle body for a 2014 Jeep Compass! $$$ once you find the engine needs re-programmed.
That black 1968 Coupe DeVille at the car wizard's is beautiful. One of the best engines, the Cadillac 472 cubic inch and in 1968 actually with a 10:1 compression ratio. TH400 transmission.
Geez. This is why insurance companies just total things out.
This is also why I'm more and more about traditional hand works. It might break, but it'll be repairable. And in the mean time it will have some soul
How would you repair a speedometer?
Have to love planned obsolescence
Apple iPhone business model trickling down to all manufactured goods. When it breaks, throw it away.
He needs a Hellcat Ute
@@CarWizard everyone does!
That Airbag sensor is out of a Tuareg SUV, same part # and plenty are available from $20 up
of this vintage will still need a board repair. they are all aging out and the capacitors are failing due to age
That airbag module is used in the Porsche Cayenne too.
the more technologically advanced (and expensive) cars become the more they turn into disposable appliances
You should do an experiment. What's cheaper to run. One modern car, or 7 old cars on a budget. Each for a day of the week.
How many miles on the older car? A modern car will have a warranty for say 30k to 50k miles depending
@@catinthehat5140 For tax reasons as value depreciation would be interesting to compare 7 classic cars, don't need to be some rare expensive models, versus a modern car. Many classics have privileges with taxes, especially the ones related with emissions. Since the cars would be driven soft, if well protected against corrosion, you could drive them literally for free for some years. Since they would retain and even increase their value.
@@waynepantry7023 I was referring to 7 classic cars used for each day of the week.
@@RogerM88 That said, almost anything since the advent of electronics is a module or a sensor away from being a brick. That's the reason actual classics still keep their value as they are literally bomb-proof and can run long after everything else's chips have fried or corroded away. Simply because the manufacturers make parts only as long as they sell the model. Then it's a matter of diminishing parts supply until there are none. They don't care about keeping old cars running, after all, once the warranty on the last year of that design expires. My own car, at 11 years old already has parts that are not orderable from Ford. None exist anywhere in the country and no more will be made. Thankfully, being a Mustang, I have plenty of aftermarket options. But I am the exception and it's part of WHY I bought the car.
@@waynepantry70237 OLD cars not 7 years old
Hoovie is the type of guy who sometimes like to eat Grilled Cheese
Is he making them at night?
I'm eating one right now.
#IamHoovie
He's making them at night@@De7una
He’s def making them at night
The Bently sensor looks like a Bosch component so maybe not VW Group exclusive?
well, 'BOSCH' is printed on the label....
@@bbb462cid Exactly
Correct, but if it has Bentley-specific firmware (which is where Jonny seems to be getting stymied),a similar module from another VAG brand isn't likely to work.
@@talon262 that and there’s a high probability that Bosch will only sell that part through VW group because of a licensing agreement of some sort.
It's almost as if obsolescence were a feature built into the car now.
To put it simply, modern cars are not designed to be fixed at all, just replaced. As an engineer at one of the big three, I’d love to chat with Tyler about this sometime
This is why I was able to pick up an 2008 Chevy HHR for $500. The shop rate to fix it was twice what the car was worth. I did all the work myself using new and wreaking yard parts and have a pending offer of $3k for it and I will make a nice profit. It was even better because a family member needed a car while theirs was in the body shop (couple months of drama thanks to insurance companies fighting over who pays) so we got a good amount of use out of it before selling it.
Profit in money costs sure but definitely not profit in labor/time costs. Your time has value too unless it’s just a hobby for you.
Hoovie, watching you grow your channel over the years has been an absolute pleasure. You deserve all of the good things you have and the ones coming to you. To see you happy again is fantastic.
Grateful fan🤙🤙
Nooooooo! Hoovies never die!
Sorry if someone has already pointed this out but the airbag module at 4:00 is widely available here in Europe, fits quite a few vehicles, cost is around € 150 new, from € 25 used