stkos79 & Mavrik,While I can understand your frustrations, I think you're missing the point of this post.denverguy81 took his car in for 6 problems:Quote »1. Weather-stripping on the drivers side window was coming off.2. CD player rattled with brakes were applied.3. Three of the four door windows rattle (and feel loose) when they are rolled partially down.4. Rattles from the dash area5. When I press the cluch down, the pedal squeeks.6. When shifting from neutral to first gear while the car is parked on a cold morning, I can hear a humming noise when I release the clutch after shifting into first.I assume that the weather stripping was replaced because denverguy has made no further mention of it. This item seems to have been straight forward.The CD player rattle has been an issue for quite a while
http://forums.genvibe.com/zerothread?id=1455 , and denverguy says it was fixed. Again, a straight forward item.Because #3 seems to be the sticky situation, I'm going to leave it until last.Rattles from the dash area ... yes we all have them. They bother some people more than others. Personally, the roads I drive on don't merit taking my car to the dealer to get a dash rattle fixed because a) rattles seem to come & go due to poorly maintained roads in my area and b) I'm not convinced that it having the dash taken apart will help matters any, but might just create a new, even more annoying rattle. This is exactly what happened to denverguy. When it comes to dash rattles, the trend seems to be that the dealerships don't take them seriously, so I don't know why anyone bothers to have them looked at! So, I'm sure it's frustrating for any service person to have to diagnose dash rattles (and fix them without creating new ones). However, if GM is going to cover dash rattles under warranty, I would suggest that a GM-wide policy be implemented when it comes to dash rattles (and it's pretty simple, if you ask me): take the service tech for a drive. Let the customer drive. If you can hear the rattle, you've got a much better chance of fixing it, I would guess.However, it appears that in the case of denverguy, the service tech did not take him out for a drive. Shame shame. So, now that we've all agreed that dash rattles are a tough situation, let's just let sleeping dogs lie.Now, my case is different. My car had a major problem (spontaneously downshifting on the highway, as it was unable to maintain 100 km/h when in 4th gear. It was constantly having to shift into 3rd to maintain speed). GM told me repeatedly that this was the car's design. However, no other AWD car was available (in the entire province) to have the District Service Manager take for a drive to do a comparison. And, no CEL ever came on, and the diagnostics offered no codes. Meanwhile, I'm driving a lemon that gets 12L/100 km, 5 days a week at 210 km/day. This started at 20,000 km, and continued until 45,000 km when it was finally fixed. It is the understatement of the year to say that I accept "That's the way the car's designed" as the root of my problem, when in actuality, it was a plugged catalytic converter. What I've learned is that the car is NOT DESIGNED PROPERLY, if an exhaust component can fail completely without triggering a CEL, considering the emissions standards to which this car was manufactured.So, back to denverguy's problems. It appears to me that it's his car, not his wife's/gf's, etc. I'm sure that other people take cars in to get repairs, but that was not the case for denverguy, and my fiance only took my car to the dealership after the DSM "moved" my case to a bigger dealership, 2 hours from where I work.Clutch pedal squeak in the GT is also a common problem that seems to work itself out. I guess you can attribute that to "that's the way the car's designed", but I think that everyone here who had that problem saw it disappear. That's the benefit of having thousands of other Vibe/Matrix owner's here: you get to learn from their experiences.As far as the humming noise, I can't say what the deal is with that. Because I don't drive a 5 or 6 spd, I have to admit that I don't pay as much attention to those issues. Perhaps someone else here on the board can offer some insight on this. Maybe they all do this?OK, back to #3: the rattely windows. My windows don't rattle, no matter what their position. Some owners have found that theirs do, and it's a matter of re-adjustment. I think meathead333 had this problem, but I can't find his post right now. The point is, on this one, IT'S NOT THE WAY THE CAR'S DESIGNED! Not all the windows rattle. Even if all the windows in all the Vibes & Matrices all over the world did rattle, they shouldn't! That's why we, as owners, take the car back to the dealership, because that is our first line of contact with the GM design team. If GM is unaware that they've built thousands of cars with rattling windows because no owner ever told them, then I guess they're not to blame. But, there are owners who have reported this issue, so the "car's design" defense doesn't sit with me.As the front-line for GM, yes the service techs take a lot of crap. If you don't want it, then you're in the wrong line of business, baby. But don't give up so easily! Just because you don't know how to fix it on the first try, doesn't mean that it's impossible to fix. However, we paid a lot of money for our cars, and we paid a lot of money buying warranty for our cars, and we deserve to get stuff fixed when it's broken and covered under the warranty. If the service tech doesn't get paid what he's worth, and doesn't even bother to fix the problem, then he's not going to get paid what he's worth the second, third .... time that the customer has to bring it in for repair.So, I guess my advice for a service advisor is: do your job. Get the information. And my advice for service techs is: learn what you ought to know. If it's not on the work order, call the customer for more information. Take them for a test drive if that's what it takes.As a response to the cruise control issue, I think that's your own fault. You don't know what the proper operation of the cruise control system is, then you go replacing parts because it doesn't operate the way you expect it to. Instead of reading the manual, you cost yourselves time & money by replacing non-defective parts. I discovered this "feature" of the Vibe the first day I owned it. I read the manual, and found it that's the way it is. I accepted it & moved on. I'm sure if the customer had been aware of this from the get go, he'd have done the same.
2003 Satellite AWD Two Tone, traded off at 180,126 kmNow the (fourth) catalytic converter is someone else's problem Now driving a 2007 Dodge Grand Caravan