inmanlanier
Getting familiar with the group...
- Joined
- Jun 9, 2011
- Messages
- 200
- Reaction score
- 54
- Points
- 28
- Location
- Palm Beach Gardens, FL
- Genesis Model Type
- 2G Genesis Sedan (2015-2016)
This is an interesting one with a twist. The sleezy scumbags tried to scam me for major BS and it backfired on them. I'd still like to know what happened. Details:
Yesterday my 2015 5.0 (39289 miles) backed out of the garage fine, and upon shifting into drive my wife immediately noticed it was misfiring. By the end of the driveway there was a check engine light. She shut it downa and called me out. I restarted the car a couple of times - no change - light on, major stumblingat idle. I backed it up, parked it and got my code reader - P0306 (# 6 misfire). I called Hyundai, they directed me to call Hyundai roadside. I'm under warranty.
At the dealer once offloaded from the tow truck same issue - but now whitish smoke and raw fuel smell. I tried to bet the service writer it was a stuck fuel injector (he was clueless).
A few hours later he calls and tells me 'bad news - water in the fuel'. Mind you - with ethanol fuels the binders make it such that when water separates, it's huge. We had already driven the 1/3rd of a tank - so IMHO no way - we would have noticed when the car was first filled up with this tank. When I start quizzing him, he says they have a sample I can come look at. When I ask him his proposed remedy he says - remove the fuel tank and clean it, replace the spark plugs, flush the fuel system - I cut him off and sternly admonished him saying stop the BS right there. No scams on me, dude. This is nonsense. I ask to come down and have him let me witness a fuel sample and speak to the mechanic. He said I can look at the fuel they've already drawn - I chuckled and said I'll witness the act - I don't trust you. He said that couldn't happen until the next afternoon.
I went down anyway. I noticed the car had already been washed (odd) - they normally do that at the end of service. When I started quizzing the service writer, he admits he is not mechanically inclined, so he takes me to the 'master mechanic'. When I start quizzing the mechanic, he quickly realized where I was going and basically just started saying to me - 'whatever you say, whatever you say - I have to get back to work'. He clammed up. I'm now quite suspicious. So I ask for the 'sample of bad fuel'. Guess what container it was in - a disposable water bottle like the packs you buy at the grocery store to drink. I made it a point to mention this to the service writer.. There were a few tiny droplet in the the bottom of something clear with a little milky residue (I'm talking fractions of an ml in perhaps 10 oz. of fuel). I had him witness me pouring through a cloth. There was zero particulate matter. I explained to the service writer that with zero miles on 'water in the fuel' - there would be ZERO damage to anything in the auto. All you need to do is get rid of it - and guess what - they make additives for exactly that. I said I'd humor him, I'd go get some dry gas and we'd run it for a little while to circulate the fuel. Then we'll see if the problems change (which of course they wouldn't because there WAS NO APPRECIABLE WATER IN THE FUEL!). I went and got the dry gas - came back poured it in. I turned the key, and the car was running perfectly, immediately upon start. No time for any effect because the dry gas had not even been circulated. In other words - it cured itself, or they did something. THERE WAS NOTHING WRONG. When I got the service writer to come over - it was all he could do to get me out of there w/o even signing paperwork (remember - this had been towed for what they purport is NOT a warranty coverage). I think he was starting to fret because they actually had a customer call them on a scam. I had him close the paperwork - there was no mention of any work done (but they washed the car!). I drove the car home - it drove fine. Today it's been fine.
So... has anyone experienced this - this being where you have it run very poorly then the next day it's fine. I'm concerned I did have a stuck injector and it's a latent issue that may happen again.
In any case I'm writing this post to document the rather dubious tactics of the mechanic and service writer.
Yesterday my 2015 5.0 (39289 miles) backed out of the garage fine, and upon shifting into drive my wife immediately noticed it was misfiring. By the end of the driveway there was a check engine light. She shut it downa and called me out. I restarted the car a couple of times - no change - light on, major stumblingat idle. I backed it up, parked it and got my code reader - P0306 (# 6 misfire). I called Hyundai, they directed me to call Hyundai roadside. I'm under warranty.
At the dealer once offloaded from the tow truck same issue - but now whitish smoke and raw fuel smell. I tried to bet the service writer it was a stuck fuel injector (he was clueless).
A few hours later he calls and tells me 'bad news - water in the fuel'. Mind you - with ethanol fuels the binders make it such that when water separates, it's huge. We had already driven the 1/3rd of a tank - so IMHO no way - we would have noticed when the car was first filled up with this tank. When I start quizzing him, he says they have a sample I can come look at. When I ask him his proposed remedy he says - remove the fuel tank and clean it, replace the spark plugs, flush the fuel system - I cut him off and sternly admonished him saying stop the BS right there. No scams on me, dude. This is nonsense. I ask to come down and have him let me witness a fuel sample and speak to the mechanic. He said I can look at the fuel they've already drawn - I chuckled and said I'll witness the act - I don't trust you. He said that couldn't happen until the next afternoon.
I went down anyway. I noticed the car had already been washed (odd) - they normally do that at the end of service. When I started quizzing the service writer, he admits he is not mechanically inclined, so he takes me to the 'master mechanic'. When I start quizzing the mechanic, he quickly realized where I was going and basically just started saying to me - 'whatever you say, whatever you say - I have to get back to work'. He clammed up. I'm now quite suspicious. So I ask for the 'sample of bad fuel'. Guess what container it was in - a disposable water bottle like the packs you buy at the grocery store to drink. I made it a point to mention this to the service writer.. There were a few tiny droplet in the the bottom of something clear with a little milky residue (I'm talking fractions of an ml in perhaps 10 oz. of fuel). I had him witness me pouring through a cloth. There was zero particulate matter. I explained to the service writer that with zero miles on 'water in the fuel' - there would be ZERO damage to anything in the auto. All you need to do is get rid of it - and guess what - they make additives for exactly that. I said I'd humor him, I'd go get some dry gas and we'd run it for a little while to circulate the fuel. Then we'll see if the problems change (which of course they wouldn't because there WAS NO APPRECIABLE WATER IN THE FUEL!). I went and got the dry gas - came back poured it in. I turned the key, and the car was running perfectly, immediately upon start. No time for any effect because the dry gas had not even been circulated. In other words - it cured itself, or they did something. THERE WAS NOTHING WRONG. When I got the service writer to come over - it was all he could do to get me out of there w/o even signing paperwork (remember - this had been towed for what they purport is NOT a warranty coverage). I think he was starting to fret because they actually had a customer call them on a scam. I had him close the paperwork - there was no mention of any work done (but they washed the car!). I drove the car home - it drove fine. Today it's been fine.
So... has anyone experienced this - this being where you have it run very poorly then the next day it's fine. I'm concerned I did have a stuck injector and it's a latent issue that may happen again.
In any case I'm writing this post to document the rather dubious tactics of the mechanic and service writer.