Hey Guys,
Sorry for the long winded post, but I'm looking for some advice on possible options...
Drove down to our Ft Myers condo from Canada and arrived on Nov 5th. It was a uneventful 2 day drive, just me, the wife and our cat. Later the first day, I noticed the car surging upon acceleration - kind of a lumpy feel. My wife asked if the road was slippery thinking the tires were losing traction, but no such issue. Acceleration was a bit jerky, almost like a misfire and only noticeable while accelerating. We continued on our way and I was thinking it might have been some bad gas running through the car.
After arriving at the condo and continuing to feel the jerking whenever accelerating in city traffic, I decided to ask Hyundai Canada if a USA dealer would provide warranty service if I chose to take it in to be checked. They responded, YES.
I took it to the local dealer who responded very quickly and had their shop's senior tech go for a ride with me taking his tablet along to diagnose any issues (no trouble light had ever shown). At first he thought it was an engine mis-fire, ruled out. Then possibly a driveshaft issue, ruled out. Then checked for transmission issues, nothing wildly out of the ordinary, but there were some unusual readings. Upon returning to the shop, he had two other techs join him for their opinion. When he came back he said they all agree - the transmission is the problem and needs to be replaced.
Ok, what now? Well, since it was a Canadian car they had to call Hyundai Canada (being a separate company) and get the in-service date and confirmation that the car is under power train warranty. They confirmed this and told me that Canada was great to deal with and told them "whatever it needs - do it". Great. They arranged a rental initially for 2 weeks in house stating that they didn't want the car leaving me stranded somewhere with a complete failure, found the only transmission available in North America in Ontario California and said it would take a week or so to get is shipped here and another 2 days to install.
Sounds good, since I'm here till the 27th when I MUST return home for various commitments. Lots of time to spare... Right??
Well, yesterday I got an email from my service rep at the dealership who said,
"Hi Jim, this is nick from XXX hyundai. the transmission that we are waiting for has not come in as of yet. i am told the part is now in a back order status and time of delivery is unavailable. when you are able, please call me"
Instead of calling, I make a short drive to the dealer and am told that there is some issue with getting the transmission from California needs to be cleared through Canada first and am directed to the Parts Manager for further clarification. The parts manager says because it's a Canadian car Hyundai Canada must approve the part and complete the order to send it to their dealership for installation. It's in the process of being approved. For a week. Without an answer.
I have emailed Hyundai Canada regarding this to see if there is any way to expedite this, but my question in the meantime is...
How do I get back to Canada? I plan on returning to Florida for part of the winter, but not till the end of Jan for 2-3 months.
1. Just give them back the rental vehicle and ask for my car keys to take my Genesis home and hope it doesn't crap out?
2. Take the rental vehicle back to the closest point on the border to my home (only a couple of miles from the border), park it and get a ride home?
3. Fly home and risk using up all 9 of our cat's lives?
I'm considering option 1, but if the transmission totally lets go on the way home will Hyundai still pay for the tow and rental car considering I removed it from the dealer here that suggested I don't drive it?
Option 2 could work, however at some time in the future I'm sure the new transmission will be in and they'll want the rental back. I'll have to drive it back to Florida which is a real pita. Also, would the rental people be ok with me putting an extra 4500 miles on their car (don't think there are any mileage restrictions).
Option 3 is not too palatable due to our pet.
Your thoughts/suggestions are welcome.
(By the way, the parts guy is definitely NOT a salesman. He says "Wow, that's a long way to drive... all the way from Canada. You should just get a cheap little car and leave it here to use and just fly down. Canadian cars quite often have a problem with the Florida heat anyway." Really? I didn't get that vibe from any of the Genesis commercials on TV. Oh, nice car, but don't try to drive it 2200 miles plus the resulting changes in temps will kill it - these cars just can't take it... I told him that part of the reason my last three cars were Genesis sedans was that they are so comfortable and competent for long highway journeys. Ridiculous.)