Hyundai and Kia are telling the owners of nearly 92,000 vehicles in the U.S. to park them outside because an electronic controller in an oil pump can overheat and cause fires.
Hyundai and Kia are telling the owners of nearly 92,000 vehicles in the U.S. to park them outside because an electronic controller in an oil pump can overheat and cause fires.
Here’s some advice; Don’t but Hyundais or Kias. And especially don’t buy Chevys. Awful garbage vehicles.
Don’t know your evidence for that comment but the Kia I drive is a very good and reliable car.
Shit quality control.
n=1
I think the takeaway might be “don’t buy cars”!
Not saying that. There are some great car manufacturers. The three mentioned previously are not.
New cars cost so much compared to even a few year old used vehicles its insane.
A year ago, I was certain that my next vehicle would be a Kia or Hyundai EV. I have a 2017 Accent and have enjoyed driving it.
Then came the spike in thefts after it became clear they never installed immobilizers in the vehicles. That itself wasn’t enough to make me lose faith in them, but their response (or lack thereof) did. Instead of quickly fixing the issue so that the thefts would rapidly halt, they blamed TikTok and charged owners up to $2K to install window break sensors.
That didn’t work, so they waited a few months and then released a software update for most vehicles (except mine) that supposedly would mitigate the issue by requiring the driver to unlock the doors with the key fob. As drivers quickly discovered, that fix also didn’t work for all vehicles.
I’ve got zero faith in them anymore. They could have come out ahead by pulling a Tylenol - admit the mistake and rapidly recall the vehicles so that immobilizers can be installed. Deflecting never works.
For the record, 96% of all 2014-2021 vehicles not made by Hyundai or Kia came with immobilizers. Every vehicle made by them which had a keyed ignition did not come with one.
Same for me. The lack of action is really the deal breaker. Sure, lapses happen with manufacturing or QA (not having an immobilizer by default is just straight up bad though), but what separates the good ones from the bad ones is that they jump into action and fix it; not delay and provide band-aid solutions. I’m just waiting to use up the pre-paid maintenance package I purchased then I’m trading mine in for a Honda.
They’re pretty solid budget cars these days. The choice between a Chevy and a Hyundai is obvious.
I would drive a motorized unicycle before buying a Chevy.
Same
Used to drive a garbage Tucson. After a couple years everything started to break
I have a Chevy Spark and it’s a great car. Haven’t had many issues (just the ones it came with when I inherited it) but my old mechanic put shitty aftermarket parts in it that have worn down after a year. Charged me outlandish prices as well. My new mechanic is getting official Chevy parts and is charging me much less. I hope to get at least 5 more years out of it. It’s a 2015 and runs exceptionally well, so I’m confident I can get to 2028.
That used to be a good rule, but they have definitely improved a lot over the past decade