2001 Audi A4 1.8T Quattro 1.8T Quattro

Summary:

Great car, expensive maintenance

Faults:

Cam seal leak is being fixed now. Rear pads & rotors replaced - 55800 miles

Timing belt 52400

Tie Rods ends @ 46500 miles

Changed to synthetic oil per recommendation of dealer @ 48200

Rear Seat belt tensioner failure @ 39300 miles

Alternator & battery 33400 miles.

General Comments:

I love my Audi, but am upset at the dealer for not doing a better job telling me what to expect as far as repairs even though they claim to do a 21 point inspection. As a female I am very suspicious that they are just trying to make money off me.

The web helps me understand what to expect as far as maintenance costs since I don't get much info from the dealer.

Took my car in Nov. 28th since it was pulling to the left & opted for an alignment & spin balance. The dealer called to alert me to a CAM seal leak & that my rear brakes needed to be replaced. Almost $1K total right before the holidays!

Would you buy another car from this manufacturer? Yes

Review Date: 29th November, 2006

2001 Audi A4 1.4

Faults:

My timing belt broke two weeks after my Audi authorized dealer service 80 K service.

Valve damage and new engine needed.

At the time of service I asked my Audi guy to do proactive maintenance so nothing would go wrong with car. I was never advised that caution would suggest the timing belt be changed and leave it up to me if I wanted this major maintenance done earlier than 90K.. The result? Disaster. New engine. Stranded on highway in the rain. Lots of towing charges.

The arrogance of Audi to wait til 90K for maintenance that can ruin an engine. Sounds like unintended acceleration all over again.

General Comments:

The arrogance of Audi to wait until 90K for timing belt maintenance when failure can ruin an engine.

Would you buy another car from this manufacturer? No

Review Date: 2nd October, 2006

2nd Oct 2006, 13:36

"Unintended acceleration" was reportedly a cop-out by drivers to cover-up their own error.

10th Oct 2006, 10:05

The sudden acceleration was found by the NHTSA to be due to driver error. They subsequently changed their finding to "pedal misapplication" saying that with some very powerful cars with closely spaced pedals, it was possible for even the best drivers to mistakenly press the accelerator instead of the brake, and be travelling at dangerous speeds before they could notice and correct. This was one of the earliest cases of political correctness run amok. The NHTSA found that the drivers had their foot on the wrong pedal, but didn't want to hurt the drivers' feelings.

Audi's solution was the shift interlock, which required the brake pedal to be fully depressed in order to shift out of park. With this retrofit, the problem disappeared completely, thus validating NHTSA's findings. As a number of other makes and models has similar incidence of sudden acceleration, the interlock quickly became standard equipment industry-wide.

2001 Audi A4 Ultra Sport 1.8 turbo

Summary:

Expensive junk

Faults:

Fuel pump after less than 200 miles.

Both front tires around 5K developed bubbles on the side walls of the tires. Cost to fix as not covered on warranty was $250 each. Pirelli all year.

Ignition coil at 35K.

Dash pixels burn out (didn't fix it).

But here is when things get bad...

I purchased a 2001.5 A4 in Oct 04 for $23K (Ultra Sport, xenons, and all the frills). I've done 42.8K miles and pampered the car. All maintenance by Audi. This is a certified car with 1 year on the Assured Warranty still left.

2 weeks ago I was on the highway, cruising at 70 mph, and while driving my battery died, then I felt a jolt, the lights were flashing on off till the car came to a stop. It could have been a bad accident. Anyway, the dealer as told me to change the timing belt. They say in this situation mileage wasn't a factor, but it was time. That the car was over 5 years old, so it was due. The dealer refuses to pay for this, and says it isn't covered on the Assured Warranty.

I called Audi of America, and they contacted the dealership, called me back, and conveyed the same message as the dealership, that either I pay $330 for the diagnosis, or $1200 for the belt (including $285 for new battery and $50 deductible for alternator and $330 for diagnosis). My car is sitting at the dealer as I write. On top of that, they refuse to give me a loner, because I towed the car from the highway instead of making an appointment.

General Comments:

If you are going to buy an Audi, sell it once the 4 year bumper to bumper warranty ends. They are very expensive to maintain.

The "Audi Assured" warranty is garbage. Audi will find ways to exclude anything of importance from this. If they do change a part, they will insist you get something else fixed to make up for their time.

The parts are over priced. I bought a battery for $285. Sears sells their Gold battery for $115 + $12 for installation.

The tires are $250 each at the dealer, plus extra for balancing etc. Sears sells the same tire with installation for $199. Online is even cheaper. "Assured Warranty" is the opportunity for Audi to rip you off.

Would you buy another car from this manufacturer? No

Review Date: 1st September, 2006