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There is no disagreement that this is a very serious problem. It‘s your reason of how you are worried about using your car I find odd. Most random left turns across traffic is probably more dangerous in this situation than taking a corner hard.We can agree to disagree - there seems to be a trend of a subset of our cars losing power without warning, and the dealers have been unable to replicate or fix the issue. We don't know if it was only a specific group of cars, or cars with certain options, etc. I love my car and I'm not getting rid of it - but I'm absolutely paying close attention to my driving habits until this type of failure gets sorted out. Bad things happen everyday (especially in my line of work), but my car shutting off while I'm getting after it has me paying close attention to this thread and any potential solutions.
Not trying to pile on but it sounds a little like a hypochondriac. Like surfing the internet and reading a story about a disease or talking with some that has a disease and suddenly you have it too. Or you become so worried about the disease someone else has that you start changing the way you live your life.There is no disagreement that this is a very serious problem. It‘s your reason of how you are worried about using your car I find odd. Most random left turns across traffic is probably more dangerous in this situation than taking a corner hard.
Not trying to pile on but it sounds a little like a hypochondriac. Like surfing the internet and reading a story about a disease or talking with some that has a disease and suddenly you have it too. Or you become so worried about the disease someone else has that you start changing the way you live your life.
Not trying to pile on but it sounds a little like a hypochondriac. Like surfing the internet and reading a story about a disease or talking with some that has a disease and suddenly you have it too. Or you become so worried about the disease someone else has that you start changing the way you live your life.
This is a bit different.
I deal with operational risk on a daily basis. In a situation like this, you'd look at likelihood and consequence of the fault. Without a root cause and with seeing the problem on multiple vehicles, the concern is that there could be systemic problem that is present on all of our cars. As to the likelihood? For cars that have not already experienced the issue the likelihood seems low in the grand scheme of things (I don't know how many 4BWs are out there, maybe 2 or 3 thousand??) and we've heard about roughly 10 cases of this. Let's say we are only hearing about 30% of the cases. That would still mean only 30 or so cars out of ~3000 have shown the problem. Not a huge risk, but very much not zero either. For cars that have already seen the issue, the likelihood of recurrence is high.
As to the consequence if the failure happens? Well, it is potentially catastrophic depending on the driving conditions at the time of the failure. I my line of work, we would not be operating the vehicle until a root cause had been established and/or a suitable workaround was developed in the event of an occurrence. This is where driving the car more conservatively would come in. Try to limit the consequences of a failure by changing the driving the conditions. That could mean slower speeds, larger following distances, waiting for bigger gaps in traffic before left turns, "training" for what you will do in various scenarios if the failure occurs (at least having a thought out plan of exactly what you should do and preparing yourself for mashing a very heavy brake pedal, for instance). I could go on and on.
But his thought of driving more conservatively is by no means strange.
We have no idea what the population of cars affected are. There are assumptions in this thread that this is a small sample of larger group. What if this is the entire population of people affected? What if it turns out to be one part that was produced on a specific day that didn't affect any other vehicles? If the problem becomes more widespread with more people speaking up and noting the issue I would feel differently. But a handful of people reporting an issue out of thousands of vehicles produced doesn't make me change my driving habits or my enjoyment of the car.This is not a good analogy. A better analogy would be the type of firearm you carry for your job has had reported malfunctions, and after the manufacturer looks the firearm over, they are unable to know what causes it and gives it back to you.
How much confidence would you have in it when push comes to shove? That’s the only point I’m making.
This engine wiring harness contact fix has been officially put as a recall, or as they coin, customer satisfaction program no. http://link.onstar.com/ls/click?upn...8Yn7C-2BpBw0xLO9pDZqwYnkzwpifPyh-2Bu2KQ-3D-3D
We have no idea what the population of cars affected are. There are assumptions in this thread that this is a small sample of larger group. What if this is the entire population of people affected? What if it turns out to be one part that was produced on a specific day that didn't affect any other vehicles? If the problem becomes more widespread with more people speaking up and noting the issue I would feel differently. But a handful of people reporting an issue out of thousands of vehicles produced doesn't make me change my driving habits or my enjoyment of the car.
I didn't realize I was. The analytical part of my mind is having difficulty understanding the concerns since only a small percentage of cars have an issue. That won't make me change my driving habits. But as you mentioned - to each his own.Not to pile on - but why are you acting so defensive now?
You sir are a Saint for owning a performance car such as this with Big Brother plugged into your OBD2 port.Update. They are returning the car to me. I don't believe they figured it out. They said they cleared the codes. I had asked them to check the grounding points as well as to see if my car was part of the recall, and they said they did that (wasn't a recall). In the end they said the only possibility was the OBD2 port which I have a gps unit installed for my insurance. They suggested I remove that to see if the problem goes away.
I may do that but I'll have to switch insurance companies and really I don't see why an OBD2 port which is diagnostic would affect the car like this. At this point I'll drive the car like normal but if it comes back a third time I may not trust them to fix it as it seems like they have already run out of options. Any idea on how to contact GM about this?
Again, I don’t think it is odd at all to worry about this issue, it is obviously a very serious one.This is a bit different.
I deal with operational risk on a daily basis. In a situation like this, you'd look at likelihood and consequence of the fault. Without a root cause and with seeing the problem on multiple vehicles, the concern is that there could be systemic problem that is present on all of our cars. As to the likelihood? For cars that have not already experienced the issue the likelihood seems low in the grand scheme of things (I don't know how many 4BWs are out there, maybe 2 or 3 thousand??) and we've heard about roughly 10 cases of this. Let's say we are only hearing about 30% of the cases. That would still mean only 30 or so cars out of ~3000 have shown the problem. Not a huge risk, but very much not zero either. For cars that have already seen the issue, the likelihood of recurrence is high.
As to the consequence if the failure happens? Well, it is potentially catastrophic depending on the driving conditions at the time of the failure. I my line of work, we would not be operating the vehicle until a root cause had been established and/or a suitable workaround was developed in the event of an occurrence. This is where driving the car more conservatively would come in. Try to limit the consequences of a failure by changing the driving the conditions. That could mean slower speeds, larger following distances, waiting for bigger gaps in traffic before left turns, "training" for what you will do in various scenarios if the failure occurs (at least having a thought out plan of exactly what you should do and preparing yourself for mashing a very heavy brake pedal, for instance). I could go on and on.
But his thought of driving more conservatively is by no means strange.
Contact your insurance company and tell them it needs to be removed for diagnostic purposes by the dealer and see what they say.Update. They are returning the car to me. I don't believe they figured it out. They said they cleared the codes. I had asked them to check the grounding points as well as to see if my car was part of the recall, and they said they did that (wasn't a recall). In the end they said the only possibility was the OBD2 port which I have a gps unit installed for my insurance. They suggested I remove that to see if the problem goes away.
I may do that but I'll have to switch insurance companies and really I don't see why an OBD2 port which is diagnostic would affect the car like this. At this point I'll drive the car like normal but if it comes back a third time I may not trust them to fix it as it seems like they have already run out of options. Any idea on how to contact GM about this?