Whom is the warranty with? If it is Hyundai/Genesis, call the hotline and file a complaint directly with them. Sometimes bean counters need a kick in the arse to motivate them. If it is a third party warranty company, call the Better Business Bureau and ask for arbitration assistance.I am currently in this process with my dealer, after their diagnoses, they agreed that a transmission replacement would be the fix. The manufacturer approved the part order however, the warranty department is refusing to approve the repair to take place. They have had my car for 2 weeks now with no updates other than what I've written here.
Warranty is through the corporation that owns the dealership. Guess my route would be the BBB then.Whom is the warranty with? If it is Hyundai/Genesis, call the hotline and file a complaint directly with them. Sometimes bean counters need a kick in the arse to motivate them. If it is a third party warranty company, call the Better Business Bureau and ask for arbitration assistance.
Yeah, third party warranties can be a pain. Manufacturer backed ones are more expensive. One last question, I wonder if the warranty is truly controlled by the dealership corporate entity or if they sell you the warranty and it is managed by a third party. Pay a visit to your old Finance & Insurance guy/gal to better understand the warranty process. If the dealer funds and manages the entire process, I'd find out whom is the General Manager. That person may have sway with the process. After that, I'd draft a letter to the owner/CEO explaining your situation, what you'd like to happen and send it USPS Certified.Warranty is through the corporation that owns the dealership. Guess my route would be the BBB then.
They happened to call today to tell me that the warranty department approved the repairs however, transmissions are currently on back order and they could not provide an estimate as to when they'll be in stock. Additionally, they will not provide a rental/loaner car as I bought used and not new. So I just get to continue to play the waiting game.Yeah, third party warranties can be a pain. Manufacturer backed ones are more expensive. One last question, I wonder if the warranty is truly controlled by the dealership corporate entity or if they sell you the warranty and it is managed by a third party. Pay a visit to your old Finance & Insurance guy/gal to better understand the warranty process. If the dealer funds and manages the entire process, I'd find out whom is the General Manager. That person may have sway with the process. After that, I'd draft a letter to the owner/CEO explaining your situation, what you'd like to happen and send it USPS Certified.
Re-read the warranty to see if there is any mention of a rental car coverage. It may be obscurely hidden in the towing section. I'd bet the transmissions have been allocated for Production, but its the shipping. They want to sail it to you on the slow boat from Korea, rather than in the belly of a 747 (Atlas Air). I'd rather wait than get something from a junk yard.They happened to call today to tell me that the warranty department approved the repairs however, transmissions are currently on back order and they could not provide an estimate as to when they'll be in stock. Additionally, they will not provide a rental/loaner car as I bought used and not new. So I just get to continue to play the waiting game.
Just re-read that section and it stated that they would reimburse $35 per day of rental car use, but that it does not cover part delay which is what I’m experiencing.Re-read the warranty to see if there is any mention of a rental car coverage. It may be obscurely hidden in the towing section. I'd bet the transmissions have been allocated for Production, but its the shipping. They want to sail it to you on the slow boat from Korea, rather than in the belly of a 747 (Atlas Air). I'd rather wait than get something from a junk yard.
I actually called the dealer and asked for more information about the backorder and they ended up agreeing to give me a loaner until the transmission comes in as their ETA for the transmission has disappeared from their system. According to the tech I spoke with, he said since the transmission for the 5.0 is produced by a german manufacturer, they have no idea when it will arrive unlike things coming from their Korean manufacturers. I now have a 2022 Santa Cruz until my car is fixed.Just re-read that section and it stated that they would reimburse $35 per day of rental car use, but that it does not cover part delay which is what I’m experiencing.
Some of the older Genesis models had a ZF six speed, later on they moved to the Hyundai built 8 speed.I actually called the dealer and asked for more information about the backorder and they ended up agreeing to give me a loaner until the transmission comes in as their ETA for the transmission has disappeared from their system. According to the tech I spoke with, he said since the transmission for the 5.0 is produced by a german manufacturer, they have no idea when it will arrive unlike things coming from their Korean manufacturers. I now have a 2022 Santa Cruz until my car is fixed.
Yeah, I know mine, the 2017 g80 5.0 Ultimate, has the 8-speed, so not sure why the tech told me it would be coming from Germany.Some of the older Genesis models had a ZF six speed, later on they moved to the Hyundai built 8 speed.
I agree it is more of a hit or miss. There could be multiple reasons of a transmission hard shift, to name a few: fluid level or age, valve body, solenoids, pump, torque converter, seals, dampeners etc.I think it is more hit and miss, replacing things until the problem resolves. Hence why the extended service contract is critical. It could be the transmission, the propeller shaft, one of the transmission joints or supporting brackets. Heck, I've seen the differential being replaced as well, even though it is all the way at the back of the car. One of those days you wish'd Hyundai had reverse engineered a LS460.
Good luck, waiting for your feedbackI agree it is more of a hit or miss. There could be multiple reasons of a transmission hard shift, to name a few: fluid level or age, valve body, solenoids, pump, torque converter, seals, dampeners etc.
However, Hyundai and Genesis released this TSB as it seems that the vast majority of the victims have been suffering from the hard shifts had their problems fixed with this approach of replacing the solenoids and updating the TCM software. I've done additional research and landed on a Russian forum (where I translated their posts) and the guys were pretty successful in decoding the reason why these solenoids fail. It is heat and temperature. These two solenoids do not have a breather and the new ones do.
I hope you all benefit from this TSB. I will attempt this fix sometime next month.
Good luck.
Husam.
You'll need an advanced OBD scanner to connect to the car and perform the special function.Husam,
how you reset the adaptive values?
Does replacing these parts really solve this problem?!
Has anyone tried?
I have the same problem + vibration at 30-35
Husam,Here is an update.
I just had the solenoids replaced in the transmission valve body a couple of days ago with a full transmission fluid change with a complete flush.
I then reset the adaptive values and then performed full adaptation by learning the pressure points of the upshifts and the downshifts.
I will continue to monitor the transmission behavior but so far the shifts are much better, you could say 70%-80% better shifts.
4 to 5 harsh upshift gone away.
2 to 3 harsh upshift 50% better.
I will write an update next week as well.
Husam.
Whom is the warranty with? If it is Hyundai/Genesis, call the hotline and file a complaint directly with them. Sometimes bean counters need a kick in the arse to motivate them. If it is a third party warranty company, call the Better Business Bureau and ask for arbitration assistance.