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Author Topic: which three year old auto boxes are the best.  (Read 4461 times)

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Varche

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which three year old auto boxes are the best.
« on: 03 January 2018, 10:37:46 »

On the reliability thread there are some comments about powershift (Ford) , DSG  (VW platform vehicles).

We still haven't found a suitable secondhand car (Golf estate size) and will start looking again once the market starts up post Xmas break.

We had a Golf dsg hire car. I thought it was brilliant apart from it being a 1.6. Loaded up on big hills it struggled. I liked the steering wheel paddles though mostly used D or sport mode.

What is vauxhalls offering like? We won't be touching any car without full service history including filter and gearbox oil changes.

I am always mindful of the AR25 /AR 35 scenario with the 2.5 BMW diesel in Omegas for example. We are looking at the more powerful diesel engines (150 in VAG, 163 in Opel)
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STEMO

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Re: which three year old auto boxes are the best.
« Reply #1 on: 03 January 2018, 11:01:57 »

You’re not going to find a three year old Vauxhall that’s had gearbox oil and filter changes. Why would anyone want to do that within three years? My 2.0l diesel auto fluid can only be changed by a specialist, according to Honest John, as the torque converter has to be drained.
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Shackeng

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Re: which three year old auto boxes are the best.
« Reply #2 on: 03 January 2018, 11:08:14 »

You’re not going to find a three year old Vauxhall that’s had gearbox oil and filter changes. Why would anyone want to do that within three years? My 2.0l diesel auto fluid can only be changed by a specialist, according to Honest John, as the torque converter has to be drained.

For which read, ^^^ this so that we can gouge as much as possible out of you. ::)
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STEMO

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Re: which three year old auto boxes are the best.
« Reply #3 on: 03 January 2018, 11:17:52 »

You’re not going to find a three year old Vauxhall that’s had gearbox oil and filter changes. Why would anyone want to do that within three years? My 2.0l diesel auto fluid can only be changed by a specialist, according to Honest John, as the torque converter has to be drained.

For which read, ^^^ this so that we can gouge as much as possible out of you. ::)
I think touching an auto box that is behaving normally before a certain time is taking preventative maintenance a step too far, Chris. You’re probably right, it would be expensive but people of ‘a certain age’ have got to realise that cars are not built to last 20 years nowadays, or at least folk don’t expect, or even want, them to last that long.
My astra will be long gone before the gearbox needs any work doing.
10 years or 100,000 miles is when most people consider a car is past it.
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tunnie

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Re: which three year old auto boxes are the best.
« Reply #4 on: 03 January 2018, 11:20:02 »

The Auto box in the Zaf is traditional one, no silly clutch setup to make it like a manual or what ever DSG does.

It’s fine, unlike Omega it appears to disengage at lights when in D, so the drag is a lot less when waiting at junction. Zaf changes smoothly and so far all good.

Have you looked at Insignia? (Sure you probably have) suspect one of these in auto is about as solid as you would get for the money.
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Field Marshal Dr. Opti

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Re: which three year old auto boxes are the best.
« Reply #5 on: 03 January 2018, 11:21:14 »

You’re not going to find a three year old Vauxhall that’s had gearbox oil and filter changes. Why would anyone want to do that within three years? My 2.0l diesel auto fluid can only be changed by a specialist, according to Honest John, as the torque converter has to be drained.

For which read, ^^^ this so that we can gouge as much as possible out of you. ::)
I think touching an auto box that is behaving normally before a certain time is taking preventative maintenance a step too far, Chris. You’re probably right, it would be expensive but people of ‘a certain age’ have got to realise that cars are not built to last 20 years nowadays, or at least folk don’t expect, or even want, them to last that long.
My astra will be long gone before the gearbox needs any work doing.
10 years or 100,000 miles is when most people consider a car is past it.

But ALL the Omega on here are older than that.
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STEMO

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Re: which three year old auto boxes are the best.
« Reply #6 on: 03 January 2018, 11:22:41 »

If Varche decides to buy a Vauxhall, he is buying what is considered a ‘throwaway’ after eight to ten years. They are worth eff all after five, so why spend money on them? The list price ( ;D) of mine was over £26000 and I got it at just over three years old for £8500 with 20000 miles on it. If I keep it three years and put another 45000 on it, what’s a six year old Vauxhall with 65000 miles on it worth? Not much.
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Field Marshal Dr. Opti

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Re: which three year old auto boxes are the best.
« Reply #7 on: 03 January 2018, 11:23:51 »

You’re not going to find a three year old Vauxhall that’s had gearbox oil and filter changes. Why would anyone want to do that within three years? My 2.0l diesel auto fluid can only be changed by a specialist, according to Honest John, as the torque converter has to be drained.

For which read, ^^^ this so that we can gouge as much as possible out of you. ::)
I think touching an auto box that is behaving normally before a certain time is taking preventative maintenance a step too far, Chris. You’re probably right, it would be expensive but people of ‘a certain age’ have got to realise that cars are not built to last 20 years nowadays, or at least folk don’t expect, or even want, them to last that long.
I'll be dead and gone  before the gearbox needs any work doing.
10 years or 100,000 miles is when most people consider a car is past it.


I imagine you will.
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STEMO

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Re: which three year old auto boxes are the best.
« Reply #8 on: 03 January 2018, 11:25:20 »

You’re not going to find a three year old Vauxhall that’s had gearbox oil and filter changes. Why would anyone want to do that within three years? My 2.0l diesel auto fluid can only be changed by a specialist, according to Honest John, as the torque converter has to be drained.

For which read, ^^^ this so that we can gouge as much as possible out of you. ::)
I think touching an auto box that is behaving normally before a certain time is taking preventative maintenance a step too far, Chris. You’re probably right, it would be expensive but people of ‘a certain age’ have got to realise that cars are not built to last 20 years nowadays, or at least folk don’t expect, or even want, them to last that long.
My astra will be long gone before the gearbox needs any work doing.
10 years or 100,000 miles is when most people consider a car is past it.

But ALL the Omega on here are older than that.
Vauxhall don’t build luxury exec cars any more and, let’s face it, beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Not many outside of our little clan would even consider owning an omega. Why would they?
People don’t want to maintain their cars any more.
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Kevin Wood

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Re: which three year old auto boxes are the best.
« Reply #9 on: 03 January 2018, 11:26:52 »

The AR25 in TD issue is more to do with the box being marginal on its ratings for the torque output. The vast majority of failures were probably on chipped Omegas, although the box wasn't as long-lived on non-chipped TDs as the rest of the AR25/35 cars in the range.

I think it's a tough one if it has to be a diesel. Manual boxes suffer DMF issues. Dual clutch gearboxes are a "brave" choice on powerful petrol or diesel cars. Everyone I know who has had a DSG gearbox has had to sell the car on for peanuts at less then intergalactic mileage because the box was playing up. I keep coming back to traditional torque converter auto boxes. They are old, proven technology and the good ones are bomb proof*.


* - poor / fragile / underspecified ones also available, especially on diesels so do your homework.
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STEMO

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Re: which three year old auto boxes are the best.
« Reply #10 on: 03 January 2018, 11:33:34 »

In my opinion, my auto gearbox will last as long as I want it to if I give it a bit of respect. When the engine is cold, I accelerate very gently and let the gears change smoothly until up to temp. I have no need to kick down very often as, with a bit of pedal control, it accelerates quite well in any gear. In other words, if you are a bit of a boy racer then an auto box is not for you. If your car, in general, gets an easy life, then an auto box is fine.
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Marks DTM Calib

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Re: which three year old auto boxes are the best.
« Reply #11 on: 03 January 2018, 11:51:48 »

Varche, both the power shift and DSG are not true auto boxes, they are manual cog boxes with actuators to change the gears and operate the clutches.

Dual clutches are only used so as to get short gear change times (as the next gear up is already engaged).

The Astra etc use a traditional auto box and to be fair, they are bulletproof.

The DSG works well in a car with power where you want to whip through the gears and get shifting quickly.....there pretty pointless in a bog standard spec car and reliability can be problematic (I guess much better with motorway use and fewer changes), they did also get dry clutch on later ones which would potentially be an unknown.

So if you change cogs a lot and want an auto then you ideally want a 'proper auto', if you don't change cogs a lot and want an auto, then get either.
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Re: which three year old auto boxes are the best.
« Reply #12 on: 03 January 2018, 11:52:29 »

The AR25 in TD issue is more to do with the box being marginal on its ratings for the torque output. The vast majority of failures were probably on chipped Omegas, although the box wasn't as long-lived on non-chipped TDs as the rest of the AR25/35 cars in the range.

I think it's a tough one if it has to be a diesel. Manual boxes suffer DMF issues. Dual clutch gearboxes are a "brave" choice on powerful petrol or diesel cars. Everyone I know who has had a DSG gearbox has had to sell the car on for peanuts at less then intergalactic mileage because the box was playing up. I keep coming back to traditional torque converter auto boxes. They are old, proven technology and the good ones are bomb proof*.


* - poor / fragile / underspecified ones also available, especially on diesels so do your homework.

I'd thought the 'old-fashioned' torque converter auto box, like the ZF 8 speed auto fitted to my Jag and others were the last of an era.

Not so it seems. They seem to be making a comeback. 
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Marks DTM Calib

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Re: which three year old auto boxes are the best.
« Reply #13 on: 03 January 2018, 11:58:15 »

The AR25 in TD issue is more to do with the box being marginal on its ratings for the torque output. The vast majority of failures were probably on chipped Omegas, although the box wasn't as long-lived on non-chipped TDs as the rest of the AR25/35 cars in the range.

I think it's a tough one if it has to be a diesel. Manual boxes suffer DMF issues. Dual clutch gearboxes are a "brave" choice on powerful petrol or diesel cars. Everyone I know who has had a DSG gearbox has had to sell the car on for peanuts at less then intergalactic mileage because the box was playing up. I keep coming back to traditional torque converter auto boxes. They are old, proven technology and the good ones are bomb proof*.


* - poor / fragile / underspecified ones also available, especially on diesels so do your homework.

I'd thought the 'old-fashioned' torque converter auto box, like the ZF 8 speed auto fitted to my Jag and others were the last of an era.

Not so it seems. They seem to be making a comeback.

They never went away, far from it.

The ZF 8HP is a cracking gearbox and used by pretty much every rear wheel drive car manufacturer out there (except Ford and GM!)......and the new AWD variant is being adopted by VAG group....... ;D
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Field Marshal Dr. Opti

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Re: which three year old auto boxes are the best.
« Reply #14 on: 03 January 2018, 12:03:51 »

The AR25 in TD issue is more to do with the box being marginal on its ratings for the torque output. The vast majority of failures were probably on chipped Omegas, although the box wasn't as long-lived on non-chipped TDs as the rest of the AR25/35 cars in the range.

I think it's a tough one if it has to be a diesel. Manual boxes suffer DMF issues. Dual clutch gearboxes are a "brave" choice on powerful petrol or diesel cars. Everyone I know who has had a DSG gearbox has had to sell the car on for peanuts at less then intergalactic mileage because the box was playing up. I keep coming back to traditional torque converter auto boxes. They are old, proven technology and the good ones are bomb proof*.


* - poor / fragile / underspecified ones also available, especially on diesels so do your homework.

I'd thought the 'old-fashioned' torque converter auto box, like the ZF 8 speed auto fitted to my Jag and others were the last of an era.

Not so it seems. They seem to be making a comeback.

They never went away, far from it.

The ZF 8HP is a cracking gearbox and used by pretty much every rear wheel drive car manufacturer out there (except Ford and GM!)......and the new AWD variant is being adopted by VAG group....... ;D

Agreed.

Using paddles and sport mode the changes seem 'almost instantaneous' and I can't see how a DCT would be much quicker.......and probably not as smooth.

The new 600 BHP BMW M5 is moving away from DCT.
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