Do you have a link to the D3 buyers guide please
Well logically, any one that allows tyre fitters to install 'knock on' balance weighs on expensive alloy wheels won't worry about dirty tyres.hi mate
was just a tounge in cheek joke , ref getting my tyres dirty
Odd... my D2 had isofix in the outer two seats on the middle row... Was it an option rather than standard?
I cant work out how people cope with children and small cars... we went on holiday in April and had to take the D2 rather than my wife's Volvo V60, as despite that being a sizeable car, by the time we'd put a child seat, the buggy, etc in it there wasnt really enough room for a weeks worth of "stuff".
Compared to the D2, the D3's boot is even more cavernous... which will be really useful for work.
I had a little look into the D2 and isofix, but mine is the base 'S' model, so Isofix weren't fitted as standard, which is a pain.
I have been looking at D3 prices on Autotrader and thinking that selling both the D2 and the Passat, and it could be an option.
One of the main factors for me now is fuel economy. Looking at the figures on autotrader, my D2 gives similar return on fuel, but I'd be more interested to hear what economy you get in the real world.
Cheers
Real world economy is town work 20mpg, general running about low 20s mpg, decent run on cruise 28/30 mpg, lots of people claim more but when you look into it they are the 20 quid fill up crowd so its never fill up to fill up, so basically they are guesstimating.
My daily commute is all of 5 miles each way, dash mpg says 22 mpg knock of 10 percent and its about right.
Mines an auto by the way, so manual may give more mog.
Ive had discos right back to the 200 and the mpg is slightly worse with each new model, but D2/3 figures are pretty much equal, a lot of that is because the td5 is a good engine but the 4 speed auto is pants.
Cheers Lynall, that's a good post. My D2 Td5 manual, on the standard 235/70R16 highway terrain tyres, I was getting around 35mpg on a long run (motorways/dual carriageways/A roads), and around 28-30mpg on general, which I thought was great. Since swapping to 245/70R16 mud terrain tyres, fuel economy has dropped to about 30mpg on decent runs, around 25 as a general. Not too bad really.
I am torn, but I do really like the D3.
Cheers Lynall, that's a good post. My D2 Td5 manual, on the standard 235/70R16 highway terrain tyres, I was getting around 35mpg on a long run (motorways/dual carriageways/A roads), and around 28-30mpg on general, which I thought was great. Since swapping to 245/70R16 mud terrain tyres, fuel economy has dropped to about 30mpg on decent runs, around 25 as a general. Not too bad really.
I am torn, but I do really like the D3.
Real world economy is town work 20mpg, general running about low 20s mpg, decent run on cruise 28/30 mpg, lots of people claim more but when you look into it they are the 20 quid fill up crowd so its never fill up to fill up, so basically they are guesstimating.
My daily commute is all of 5 miles each way, dash mpg says 22 mpg knock of 10 percent and its about right.
Mines an auto by the way, so manual may give more mog.
Ive had discos right back to the 200 and the mpg is slightly worse with each new model, but D2/3 figures are pretty much equal, a lot of that is because the td5 is a good engine but the 4 speed auto is pants.
Looks good, I love my D3.........................................even though I have had some scary repair bills.
plus , one quick thing i learnt was buying a decent diagnostic reader , thks to @Nodge68 for the gap iid recommendation , fantastic bit of kit , alas are currently £420 but pay for itself very quickly
I paid £5K for my D3 in August 2013 with full main dealer history and 150K on it. Over the next 2 years and 25K miles I paid over £3K in replacement parts for it. Lots was spent undoing "dealer bodges" and even more spent on repairing or replacing fragile components that shouldn't have failed in the first place.
The list of parts I replaced was huge, many of which really shouldn't have failed.
So I got tired of constantly shelling out on it, so we parted company.
Definitely the first thing to buy Gary.
hi mate
ur not wrong there ref where others haven’t done repairs right , taken me months sorting out issues here and there that haven’t been done just right , even silly things like replacing ordinary screws with the correct plastic wheel arch fixings , etc
got the bluetooth iid version soon after i bought the D3 , dread to think what it would have cost if i had to visit a dealer every time, min. £50 each time would have soon added up
next year i intend to fit a split charge t max system, as blimey they are power hungry
like most of us , find the internet such a godsend for parts and being able to compare prices
I had the BT IID too. They sound expensive when initially buying them. However after selling my D3, I then sold my IID for £350. I only paid £380 for mine, so it cost me £30 in 2 years of ownership. You'll not get a better diagnostic device for the equivalent of £15 PA.
I don't know why so many D3s are awash with horrendous bodges. It can only be down to owners not willing to spend out on the correct repairs and maintenance for them.
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