30k+ service questions
#1
Guest
Posts: n/a
30k+ service questions
I recently took my 2005 Elantra into the dealership for its 30k mile
service. However, as I was relocating at the time to a new apartment
and money was tight when they told me it would be $900 I told them
just to change the oil.
When I refused service the tech said "You don't want to void your
warranty". I'm only 3k miles past that point at the moment.
Does that sound reasonable to change some fluids and do some general
maintenance?
service. However, as I was relocating at the time to a new apartment
and money was tight when they told me it would be $900 I told them
just to change the oil.
When I refused service the tech said "You don't want to void your
warranty". I'm only 3k miles past that point at the moment.
Does that sound reasonable to change some fluids and do some general
maintenance?
#2
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 30k+ service questions
My experience, learned the hard way, is to look at your service manual
BEFORE they give you the pitch to change and check every darn thing on the
car. Just do what it says in the manual for 30K miles and tell them forget
the rest until you think it might be prudent to check the other things they
tried to stuff down your throat.
<jamina1@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:9189f7ba-b9ea-45f2-965e-bb1bd72eb7fb@59g2000hsb.googlegroups.com...
>I recently took my 2005 Elantra into the dealership for its 30k mile
> service. However, as I was relocating at the time to a new apartment
> and money was tight when they told me it would be $900 I told them
> just to change the oil.
> When I refused service the tech said "You don't want to void your
> warranty". I'm only 3k miles past that point at the moment.
>
> Does that sound reasonable to change some fluids and do some general
> maintenance?
BEFORE they give you the pitch to change and check every darn thing on the
car. Just do what it says in the manual for 30K miles and tell them forget
the rest until you think it might be prudent to check the other things they
tried to stuff down your throat.
<jamina1@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:9189f7ba-b9ea-45f2-965e-bb1bd72eb7fb@59g2000hsb.googlegroups.com...
>I recently took my 2005 Elantra into the dealership for its 30k mile
> service. However, as I was relocating at the time to a new apartment
> and money was tight when they told me it would be $900 I told them
> just to change the oil.
> When I refused service the tech said "You don't want to void your
> warranty". I'm only 3k miles past that point at the moment.
>
> Does that sound reasonable to change some fluids and do some general
> maintenance?
#3
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 30k+ service questions
631grant wrote:
> My experience, learned the hard way, is to look at your service manual
> BEFORE they give you the pitch to change and check every darn thing on the
> car. Just do what it says in the manual for 30K miles and tell them forget
> the rest until you think it might be prudent to check the other things they
> tried to stuff down your throat.
That's exactly right. You're only required to do what's in the manual
and you can do it yourself or have any mechanic do it, it doesn't have
to be the dealer, who is apparently a thief. For that matter, I'd report
the dealer to Hyundai, as what they're doing is unnecessary, unethical
and discourages people from doing the maintenance required to maintain
their vehicle and their warranty.
Just as an example, my local dealer charges $600 for the 60K service,
which includes changing the timing belt (that still seems high to me,
considering I did the whole thing myself for under $200). Your 30K
service doesn't require any major work and your dealer wants $900?
> My experience, learned the hard way, is to look at your service manual
> BEFORE they give you the pitch to change and check every darn thing on the
> car. Just do what it says in the manual for 30K miles and tell them forget
> the rest until you think it might be prudent to check the other things they
> tried to stuff down your throat.
That's exactly right. You're only required to do what's in the manual
and you can do it yourself or have any mechanic do it, it doesn't have
to be the dealer, who is apparently a thief. For that matter, I'd report
the dealer to Hyundai, as what they're doing is unnecessary, unethical
and discourages people from doing the maintenance required to maintain
their vehicle and their warranty.
Just as an example, my local dealer charges $600 for the 60K service,
which includes changing the timing belt (that still seems high to me,
considering I did the whole thing myself for under $200). Your 30K
service doesn't require any major work and your dealer wants $900?
#4
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 30k+ service questions
My Sonata calls for an oil change, an air filter change and a change in the
filter for the gas tank. Nothing else. The Hyundai dealer told me they
have never changed that gas tank filter in ten years of operation there.
That one is expensive but they didn't even stock them so I said screw that
one. Nothing there is even close to $900.... Do it yourself for $40 and
give the dealer the big finger.
<jamina1@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:9189f7ba-b9ea-45f2-965e-bb1bd72eb7fb@59g2000hsb.googlegroups.com...
>I recently took my 2005 Elantra into the dealership for its 30k mile
> service. However, as I was relocating at the time to a new apartment
> and money was tight when they told me it would be $900 I told them
> just to change the oil.
> When I refused service the tech said "You don't want to void your
> warranty". I'm only 3k miles past that point at the moment.
>
> Does that sound reasonable to change some fluids and do some general
> maintenance?
filter for the gas tank. Nothing else. The Hyundai dealer told me they
have never changed that gas tank filter in ten years of operation there.
That one is expensive but they didn't even stock them so I said screw that
one. Nothing there is even close to $900.... Do it yourself for $40 and
give the dealer the big finger.
<jamina1@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:9189f7ba-b9ea-45f2-965e-bb1bd72eb7fb@59g2000hsb.googlegroups.com...
>I recently took my 2005 Elantra into the dealership for its 30k mile
> service. However, as I was relocating at the time to a new apartment
> and money was tight when they told me it would be $900 I told them
> just to change the oil.
> When I refused service the tech said "You don't want to void your
> warranty". I'm only 3k miles past that point at the moment.
>
> Does that sound reasonable to change some fluids and do some general
> maintenance?
#5
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 30k+ service questions
I agree on the evap filter. More money than it's worth. If it becomes
clogged, it may cause difficulty in filling the tank and a check engine
lamp. But it won't affect the way the car runs and it won't cause
anything else to break. Pony up the bucks when it eventually fails.
--
Message posted using http://www.talkaboutautos.com/group/alt.autos.hyundai/
More information at http://www.talkaboutautos.com/faq.html
clogged, it may cause difficulty in filling the tank and a check engine
lamp. But it won't affect the way the car runs and it won't cause
anything else to break. Pony up the bucks when it eventually fails.
--
Message posted using http://www.talkaboutautos.com/group/alt.autos.hyundai/
More information at http://www.talkaboutautos.com/faq.html
#6
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 30k+ service questions
Thank you for your suggestions and tips!
There's a local mechanic doing coolant flushes for 49.99, and that's
the only thing listed as a "must" in the manual, besides the regular
oil changes and possibly the air filter. Thanks
On Apr 7, 10:48 pm, "631grant" <tjwit...@bellsouth.net> wrote:
> My Sonata calls for an oil change, an air filter change and a change in the
> filter for the gas tank. Nothing else. The Hyundai dealer told me they
> have never changed that gas tank filter in ten years of operation there.
> That one is expensive but they didn't even stock them so I said screw that
> one. Nothing there is even close to $900.... Do it yourself for $40 and
> give the dealer the big finger.
>
> <jami...@gmail.com> wrote in message
>
> news:9189f7ba-b9ea-45f2-965e-bb1bd72eb7fb@59g2000hsb.googlegroups.com...
>
> >I recently took my 2005 Elantra into the dealership for its 30k mile
> > service. However, as I was relocating at the time to a new apartment
> > and money was tight when they told me it would be $900 I told them
> > just to change the oil.
> > When I refused service the tech said "You don't want to void your
> > warranty". I'm only 3k miles past that point at the moment.
>
> > Does that sound reasonable to change some fluids and do some general
> > maintenance?
There's a local mechanic doing coolant flushes for 49.99, and that's
the only thing listed as a "must" in the manual, besides the regular
oil changes and possibly the air filter. Thanks
On Apr 7, 10:48 pm, "631grant" <tjwit...@bellsouth.net> wrote:
> My Sonata calls for an oil change, an air filter change and a change in the
> filter for the gas tank. Nothing else. The Hyundai dealer told me they
> have never changed that gas tank filter in ten years of operation there.
> That one is expensive but they didn't even stock them so I said screw that
> one. Nothing there is even close to $900.... Do it yourself for $40 and
> give the dealer the big finger.
>
> <jami...@gmail.com> wrote in message
>
> news:9189f7ba-b9ea-45f2-965e-bb1bd72eb7fb@59g2000hsb.googlegroups.com...
>
> >I recently took my 2005 Elantra into the dealership for its 30k mile
> > service. However, as I was relocating at the time to a new apartment
> > and money was tight when they told me it would be $900 I told them
> > just to change the oil.
> > When I refused service the tech said "You don't want to void your
> > warranty". I'm only 3k miles past that point at the moment.
>
> > Does that sound reasonable to change some fluids and do some general
> > maintenance?
#7
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 30k+ service questions
jamina1@gmail.com wrote:
> Thank you for your suggestions and tips!
> There's a local mechanic doing coolant flushes for 49.99, and that's
> the only thing listed as a "must" in the manual, besides the regular
> oil changes and possibly the air filter. Thanks
Find out if he uses demineralized or distilled water. If not, go
elsewhere, as one of the leading killers of radiators is the minerals in
tap water, often used to flush cooling systems and dilute antifreeze.
Personally, I just drain the radiator and replace the removed coolant
with either fresh pre-mixed coolant or my own mix using distilled water
(from the grocery store). I realize this isn't a full flush, but it
beats flushing with tap water.
> Thank you for your suggestions and tips!
> There's a local mechanic doing coolant flushes for 49.99, and that's
> the only thing listed as a "must" in the manual, besides the regular
> oil changes and possibly the air filter. Thanks
Find out if he uses demineralized or distilled water. If not, go
elsewhere, as one of the leading killers of radiators is the minerals in
tap water, often used to flush cooling systems and dilute antifreeze.
Personally, I just drain the radiator and replace the removed coolant
with either fresh pre-mixed coolant or my own mix using distilled water
(from the grocery store). I realize this isn't a full flush, but it
beats flushing with tap water.
#8
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 30k+ service questions
Do you think the pre-mix uses distilled water?
--
> Personally, I just drain the radiator and replace the removed coolant with
> either fresh pre-mixed coolant or my own mix using distilled water (from
> the grocery store). I realize this isn't a full flush, but it beats
> flushing with tap water.
--
> Personally, I just drain the radiator and replace the removed coolant with
> either fresh pre-mixed coolant or my own mix using distilled water (from
> the grocery store). I realize this isn't a full flush, but it beats
> flushing with tap water.
#9
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 30k+ service questions
Partner wrote:
> Do you think the pre-mix uses distilled water?
It's made with demineralized water, which is just as good for the
purpose. The only reason I use distilled water is that it's easier to
find than demineralized water.
> Do you think the pre-mix uses distilled water?
It's made with demineralized water, which is just as good for the
purpose. The only reason I use distilled water is that it's easier to
find than demineralized water.
#10
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 30k+ service questions
> GUEST wrote:
> I recently took my 2005 Elantra into the dealership for its 30k
mile
> service. However, as I was relocating at the time to a new
apartment
> and money was tight when they told me it would be $900 I told them
> just to change the oil.
> When I refused service the tech said "You don't want to void
your
> warranty". I'm only 3k miles past that point at the moment.
>
> Does that sound reasonable to change some fluids and do some
general
> maintenance?
This is an interesting topic. For many years,
I have not flushed my cooling systems but just drained it until it
stopped draining and filled it with pure antifreeze or mixture,
whichever made the correct concentration.
Only problem I have had, and this may be a coincidence, but one year I
used the orange antifreeze that was supposed to last longer and the
water pump started to leak almost immediately.
How do you flush a cooling system without removing the thermostat?
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)