I also now have lovely letter, despite the VIN website confirming in do not have an affected car. Doesn't fill me with confidence. I love the car though despite their massive balls-up.
Are there any Seat insiders on here who can give us an accurate idea about what the fix will actually consist of and impact on the car?
Think we missing the main point here, i tried to trade in my Seat Exeo to get a BMW, from two dealers, and they wouldn't take it in, as its affected they couldn't guarantee that they could sell it on, therefore in my eyes the car is worthless until its fixed........If the rumours are true there is an american paper who has been told of the costs, i can't find it again but around 2500 per car for parts, then labour..... 2.0tdi engines and above... how true this is i don't know...
All i know now is we have cars that are worthless.....until fixed
Interesting that people are talking of receiving letters.
Manufacturers get details of owners from DVLA for recalls.
I only bought me Leon last week and don't even have the V5C back from DVLA.
Mines affected according to the website but obviously a lot of cars are going to exchange hands between now and the actual recall fix so will they'll surely have to check who the actual owners are closer to the time?
Just wondering what would be the cheapest way to backup the ECU data so if an enforced re-write was detrimental to our cars performance we could restore the original.
I am thinking an OBD2 lead but what software would be required for say a Win 7/8 laptop?