Accord transmission problems - best approach?

Discussion in 'Accord' started by Dave Garrett, Jul 16, 2008.

  1. Dave Garrett

    Dave Garrett Guest

    Well, it finally happened. A couple of days ago, the CEL came on in my
    wife's 98 Accord V6. She also reported that she thought the car wasn't
    shifting normally. I drove it and couldn't be sure, but I thought it was
    not shifting as decisively as it normally does. Fearing the worst, I had
    her take it over to our favored independent shop this morning so he
    could pull the code. Sure enough, he reported that it indicated problems
    with the transmission.

    The car has 116K miles on it. We purchased it used (certified, with a
    HondaCare warranty) from a Honda dealer about five years ago with 41K
    miles on it. Major service interval maintenance has been performed at
    the same dealer, and a drain-and-refill was just performed about three
    months ago. I am well aware of the numerous problems with the V6 auto
    transmissions, as well as Honda's quiet warranty extension on the 00/01
    model years and "unofficial" warranty extension on some of the other
    years. Frankly, it's ridiculous that a Honda transmission should be
    heading toward failure at under 120K miles.

    The code was reset after being read today. Assuming it recurs, I plan to
    take the car in to the dealer and attempt to make the case that Honda
    should cover the cost of a replacement transmission as this is a well-
    documented engineering flaw and they have provided similar consideration
    in the past to other owners. I'm not sure how much this dealer will be
    willing to go to bat for me with American Honda, but I'm prepared to
    contact American Honda directly if I can't reach a mutually acceptable
    agreement with the dealer. I'm hoping that my long history of Honda
    ownership will count in my favor if they're on the fence about doing
    anything.

    For those of you who have dealt with this problem previously, and have
    managed to convince Honda to absorb some/all of the cost of a new
    transmission, any words of advice as to the best approach to take, or
    links to other sites I might want to check out?

    Thanks in advance,

    Dave
     
    Dave Garrett, Jul 16, 2008
    #1
  2. Dave Garrett

    motsco_ Guest

    ============================

    What's the code ? ? ? ?
     
    motsco_, Jul 18, 2008
    #2
  3. Dave Garrett

    motsco_ Guest

    ============================

    What's the code ? ? ? ?
     
    motsco_, Jul 18, 2008
    #3
  4. Dave Garrett

    Pszemol Guest

    How can you know it is the same issue as with other owners?
    How are you going to prove that this is engineering flaw?
    What exactly is the problem with your transmission? The code #?
     
    Pszemol, Jul 18, 2008
    #4
  5. Dave Garrett

    Pszemol Guest

    How can you know it is the same issue as with other owners?
    How are you going to prove that this is engineering flaw?
    What exactly is the problem with your transmission? The code #?
     
    Pszemol, Jul 18, 2008
    #5
  6. Dave Garrett

    Dave Garrett Guest

    I don't have it - yet. I wasn't there when the shop read it, and not
    being very familiar with ECUs and trouble codes, my wife didn't think to
    ask him for it. I called the shop today to find out what it was, but
    they'd closed up early (it's a small shop and the two owners are the
    sole employees). FWIW, I trust this shop implicitly - they are
    knowledgable and honest, so I'm absolutely certain they're not trying to
    sell me an expensive transmission repair I don't need.

    I'll post the code when I have it. It's been two days and the CEL hasn't
    come on again yet after being reset.

    Dave
     
    Dave Garrett, Jul 18, 2008
    #6
  7. Dave Garrett

    Dave Garrett Guest

    I don't have it - yet. I wasn't there when the shop read it, and not
    being very familiar with ECUs and trouble codes, my wife didn't think to
    ask him for it. I called the shop today to find out what it was, but
    they'd closed up early (it's a small shop and the two owners are the
    sole employees). FWIW, I trust this shop implicitly - they are
    knowledgable and honest, so I'm absolutely certain they're not trying to
    sell me an expensive transmission repair I don't need.

    I'll post the code when I have it. It's been two days and the CEL hasn't
    come on again yet after being reset.

    Dave
     
    Dave Garrett, Jul 18, 2008
    #7
  8. Dave Garrett

    Dave Garrett Guest

    It isn't exactly a secret that there have been instances of Honda V6
    auto transmission failures in numbers far above what could be considered
    a normal statistical average. I don't know exactly how many failures
    there have been, and I'm sure Honda isn't eager to publicize that kind
    of data, but there have been enough to cause at least one class-action
    lawsuit to be filed and the factory warranty period extended to 100,000
    miles for certain model years.

    It's not just random chance that has caused failures specific to V6 auto
    trannys over multiple model years of Accords and Odysseys dating back to
    1998. I don't know what else you'd call it besides an engineering flaw.
    It's certainly a marked downturn for a company that used to be known for
    the superior engineering of its powerplants.

    The problem with mine is an increasing reluctance to shift. And as I
    mentioned in another post, I don't have the code # yet but will post it
    when I do.

    Dave
     
    Dave Garrett, Jul 18, 2008
    #8
  9. Dave Garrett

    Dave Garrett Guest

    It isn't exactly a secret that there have been instances of Honda V6
    auto transmission failures in numbers far above what could be considered
    a normal statistical average. I don't know exactly how many failures
    there have been, and I'm sure Honda isn't eager to publicize that kind
    of data, but there have been enough to cause at least one class-action
    lawsuit to be filed and the factory warranty period extended to 100,000
    miles for certain model years.

    It's not just random chance that has caused failures specific to V6 auto
    trannys over multiple model years of Accords and Odysseys dating back to
    1998. I don't know what else you'd call it besides an engineering flaw.
    It's certainly a marked downturn for a company that used to be known for
    the superior engineering of its powerplants.

    The problem with mine is an increasing reluctance to shift. And as I
    mentioned in another post, I don't have the code # yet but will post it
    when I do.

    Dave
     
    Dave Garrett, Jul 18, 2008
    #9
  10. It resulted in the largest recall ever, and is the direct result of
    Honda giving too much power to the beancounters in the late 80s/early
    90s. They went too far, and damn near destroyed Honda's carefully built
    reputation. But what did they care--they needed results for next
    quarter, screw this long term thing.
     
    Elmo P. Shagnasty, Jul 19, 2008
    #10
  11. It resulted in the largest recall ever, and is the direct result of
    Honda giving too much power to the beancounters in the late 80s/early
    90s. They went too far, and damn near destroyed Honda's carefully built
    reputation. But what did they care--they needed results for next
    quarter, screw this long term thing.
     
    Elmo P. Shagnasty, Jul 19, 2008
    #11
  12. Dave Garrett

    Tegger Guest



    The 1998 Accord is, as far as I can determine, not part of the inherently
    defective crowd.

    Honda has very publicly admitted to the existence of several serious
    defects in V6 auto trannies for the '99 to '04 model years of various
    models, and has been generous in fixing them. Honda has had its eye on
    Toyota and their past troubles with certain 1MZ-FE 3.0 V6's, and is not
    eager to be tarred with the same brush.

    Your '98? Well, it's ten years old, with ten years of potential neglect and
    abuse. The wrong fluid, neglected changes, who knows what.
    To "mashup" Curly and the rock group REM, "What's the Code, Kenneth?"
     
    Tegger, Jul 19, 2008
    #12
  13. Dave Garrett

    Tegger Guest



    The 1998 Accord is, as far as I can determine, not part of the inherently
    defective crowd.

    Honda has very publicly admitted to the existence of several serious
    defects in V6 auto trannies for the '99 to '04 model years of various
    models, and has been generous in fixing them. Honda has had its eye on
    Toyota and their past troubles with certain 1MZ-FE 3.0 V6's, and is not
    eager to be tarred with the same brush.

    Your '98? Well, it's ten years old, with ten years of potential neglect and
    abuse. The wrong fluid, neglected changes, who knows what.
    To "mashup" Curly and the rock group REM, "What's the Code, Kenneth?"
     
    Tegger, Jul 19, 2008
    #13
  14. Dave Garrett

    Tony Harding Guest

    That philosophy has worked out great for Detroit, hasn't it? One of the
    major failings of US management IMHO.
     
    Tony Harding, Jul 19, 2008
    #14
  15. That philosophy has worked out great for Detroit, hasn't it? One of the
    major failings of US management IMHO.[/QUOTE]

    Absolutely.

    Except that Honda had a reputation that Detroit NEVER had. And Honda
    took steps, voluntary steps, that to this day Detroit management ignores
    the same way a frog ignores anything that doesn't act like a fly.

    Honda WANTED to take care of the horrendous problem they created.
    Detroit doesn't even recognize the problems they create.
     
    Elmo P. Shagnasty, Jul 19, 2008
    #15
  16. Dave Garrett

    Tony Harding Guest

    Absolutely.

    Except that Honda had a reputation that Detroit NEVER had. And Honda
    took steps, voluntary steps, that to this day Detroit management ignores
    the same way a frog ignores anything that doesn't act like a fly.

    Honda WANTED to take care of the horrendous problem they created.
    Detroit doesn't even recognize the problems they create.[/QUOTE]

    As demonstrated in multiple safety recalls - if settling the anticipated
    no. of law suits is cheaper than correcting the problem, that's the way
    they go, no matter how many people die. This is what happens when MBAs
    run the show.
     
    Tony Harding, Jul 19, 2008
    #16
  17. Dave Garrett

    jim beam Guest


    thank this guy:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Macnamara

    it's simply the "quantitative approach" he instilled in everything he
    touched. he didn't work in detroit long, but his doctrines have been
    taken to heart and never forgotten.
     
    jim beam, Jul 19, 2008
    #17
  18. Dave Garrett

    TomP Guest

    If you have had this car serviced by the "dealer" for the last 5 years.
    They may go to bat for you.
    10 year old car: At what point do you take full responsibility and own the
    car?

    I'm curious, just what is your expectation regarding transmission life?
     
    TomP, Jul 19, 2008
    #18
  19. Dave Garrett

    TomP Guest

    If you have had this car serviced by the "dealer" for the last 5 years.
    They may go to bat for you.
    10 year old car: At what point do you take full responsibility and own the
    car?

    I'm curious, just what is your expectation regarding transmission life?
     
    TomP, Jul 19, 2008
    #19
  20. Dave Garrett

    Pszemol Guest

    My expectations are for the whole life of the car, 300 thousand miles or more.
    Properly mainained transmission should never go bad in my opinion :)
    Are my expectations too high for honda?
     
    Pszemol, Jul 19, 2008
    #20
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