You're right, but for me I drive highway 90% of my 120 mile round trip commute. Use to get 52-54mpg consistently at 65mph. After I got the the reflash from the Stealership I have a hard time reaching 50mpg. If what ever fix they do lowers my mileage any more....my dpf will accidentally find its way off my car....
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After a 700m round trip from LA to the desert this weekend I noticed that when cruising I haven't seen much difference but any inclines or hard acceleration and the mileage plummets like a cinder block.
That may be why some people are not noticing much difference and others are seeing major hits.
I keep reading in this thread about how VW should pay us 150-200% of KBB Value, but how fair is that when KBB values have already been manipulated downward in the past week due to all the VW revelations? Three months ago, I test drove a 2015 GTI and was quoted $11K trade-in value for my 2010 Golf TDI, before any other discounts. Yesterday, I test drove a few new Mazdas and was quoted $7500. Both Values were based on KBB. That is a huge drop in value, so I most certainly hope VW does NOT base any kind of reimbursement on current KBB values.
A dealer is going to try and use any book that can be used to haggle you down and doesn't reflect fair market value.
For a vehicle with special interest, like a TDI, an enthusiast BMW, or a classic muscle car, for example, the market is much more difficult to read if you don't have much experience. My '98 TDI KBB value is about $1,000. I haven't checked my E30's estimate, but it's probably the same. Both regularly sell for for 4-5x their KBB values and anyone selling at those prices would be taking a significant real-world loss. Buyers, however, are happy to offer pennies on the dollar. The simple fact that they're willing to offer you anything at all, while simultaneously claiming they need to be worried about resale value, tells you that they're not that worried about reselling the car. If a dealer was really worried about the resale value of a car, they wouldn't entertain an offer.
The legalities of a situation like this are that the responsible party needs to make you "whole." VW won't be able to use KBB or any book value to determine what any kind of pay out will be. They'll need to restore you (or us) to the state we were at before the damage. It's the same thing as when you're in a car accident. Insurance agents will always try and use various booking values but it's on you, the injured party, to research how much it will actually cost to get you back to where you were before the accident. When my wife's Geo Metro was totaled, the insurance company tried to offer us $850 dollars. They wanted to see any documentation of how much we paid for the car ($650), which unfortunately for them was irrelevant. Gas prices had risen dramatically over the year since we'd bought her car, it wasn't running and had bald tires when we bought it, I rebuilt the carburetor, put new tires on it, and put a new radiator in it (the seller still sold it for way below market value, again because he used KBB to price it out). At the time of her accident it wasn't possible to get a Geo Metro, in any condition much less comparable to hers, for less than $3,000 dollars and that's the base price we ultimately settled on with the responsible party's insurance agent.
If you want to get a sense of the current value of your vehicle look on these forums and any place that sells TDIs to see how much you can *buy* one for, not how much someone interested in owning or selling yours offers you for the one you currently possess.