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Just had the F37 recall (finally) performed on the wife's '05. We started getting a vibration from the driveline that kept getting worse and worse. The first time the dealer said they couldn't feel it or find it. We took it home and kept it until it was like driving a paint mixer around.
Took it back to the dealer and they said (without even driving it) it must be the torque converter as we'd not had the recall done yet. We finally said "fine, do the darn recall if it turns your crank". It had been running just fine up until this point. We tried to tell them the vibration felt like a bad u-joint, but of course, they knew best.
They call back a little later, after driving it, and said, "yeah, um, it's a bad u-joint". Whatever... So, we still had them do the F37 recall, and the whole deal took them two days. Fortunately, they gave her a loaner for that whole time.
What prompted the F37 finally was a comment I heard from a Chrysler engineer that said to me it is not IF the torque converter fails, it is WHEN it fails. OK, nuff said. We'd been rolling the dice long enough.
So, with all said and done, the vibration is gone and it runs like always. She had already had the F31 flash done a long time ago, so the shifting is the same and the rest of the performance and fuel mileage is unchanged. I do notice a little more "seat of the pants" vibration, particularly under low rpms in lockup, which is consistent with the new torque converter. The "bad" torque converters had a damper added to them, and the rivets holding the dampers would fail and lunch the rest of the torque converter. The "F37" converters are just the pre-'05 converters without the added damper. This is info I got first hand from the engineer for the CRD powertrain that sat next to an engineer I worked with for the VW diesel that went into the Caliber, Patriot, and Compass for export.
The rant portion of this all is in 3 years and 53,000 miles, we've had front balljoints replaced (twice), a rear track bar joint replaced, a frozen rear brake caliper, new rear brakes, a new torque converter, multiple flashes, a bad u-joint, 3 EGR valves, a flow control valve, and I'm sure there is something I've forgotten.
I've had my TDI for 120,000 miles and 7 years and haven't had 20% of the problems and it's never been to a dealer. I've done the work myself.
Fortunately, it's all been covered under the 70/7 powertrain warranty, so we've not been out any money, but it's been a lot of time and hassle. But, she still loves the darn thing, and it is a hoot to drive....
chris
_________________ '02 Jetta TDI Wagon 5 spd (mine) '10 Outback (her's) '05 CRD Sport (hangar queen)
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